An Attempt to eradicate Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) and G. tachinoides Westw. from Riverine Vegetation in Benue Province, Northern Nigeria, by Spraying with DDT

1958 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. B. Davies

During 1955 and 1956 two attempts were made to eradicate Glossina, palpalis (R.-D.) and G. tachinoides Westw. from 8¼ miles of heavily forested perennial river in Benue Province of the Northern Kegion of Nigeria by using DDT.Descriptions of the rivers and the means employed in applying the DDT using knapsack sprayers are given, together with the effect of the insecticide on the fly population.It was found that it was possible to eliminate G. palpalis from this type of habitat, where the forest is largely restricted to the immediate vicinity of the rivers, but that isolation must be carefully undertaken to prevent reinvasion, which would appear to be more extensive than had been expected. G. palpalis was completely absent for 18 weeks.G. tachinoides, which was present in much smaller numbers, also disappeared on the treated river, but because of a similar disappearance on the control river it is not possible to attribute this to the insecticidal treatment.The cost of spraying was about half the cost of clearing by normal current methods.

1957 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. A. M. Nash ◽  
J. O. Steiner

SummaryAn experiment has been undertaken in Northern Nigeria to ascertain whether the felling of the trees forming the overhead canopy and the deliberate blocking, with trash, of the stream-bed to obstruct the tsetse's flight-line, would result in the eradication of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.).Obstructive clearing was employed on approximately 3¾ miles of stream. The results suggest that, provided the experimental reaches are adequately isolated, obstructive clearing does lead to the eradication of G. palpalis.It is noteworthy that if, owing to inadequate isolation, the cleared stream becomes re-infested in the rains, conditions for at least the first two dry seasons are so unfavourable that flies cannot persist.The immediate effect of obstructive clearing is to increase greatly the hunger of the few surviving flies.Records suggest that obstructive clearing leads to a considerable reduction in the number of human hosts visiting uninhabited parts of the stream, presumably because of the destruction of forest produce. The duiker (Sylvicapra and Cephalophus) population also becomes greatly reduced, especially in the vicinity of hamlets. The hunger observed in the surviving fly population may therefore be in part due to an actual reduction in the number of hosts, as well as to the altered environment, which prevents free movement, under shade, of the hungry tsetse that is searching for food; instead, the tsetse is forced out into the open, where the climate in the dry season is intolerable, and presumably the unsuccessful fly rapidly succumbs from water-loss.The effect of obstructive clearing on the vegetation is as follows. Within a few weeks the mound of trash is overgrown with creepers, Mucuna pruriens becoming dominant. In the first year's heavy rains the mound of trash tends to sink down in the stream-bed; on larger streams, spates do some temporary damage to the creeper growth and gaps may appear in the obstruction. The impression gained is that the blockage will persist for many years on small tributaries, but will disintegrate within a few years on larger streams. In very hilly country, with a rapid run off, the obstruction is likely to be displaced. In perennial streams of the type dealt with, the annual fires make only small inroads into the obstruction.The technique evolved for the obstructive clearing of streams is described. The cost of this method worked out at 390 man days per mile, which is about half the cost of the present methods.Should large-scale undertakings in the field confirm the efficacy of this new method, the biggest saving will be the elimination of the present necessity to re-slash streams that have been partially cleared. Observations will be continued to ascertain how long it will be before the vegetation again becomes suitable for G. palpalis.


1957 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-533 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. McDonald

The range of Thyridanthrax abruptus (Lw.), a widespread puparial parasite of Glossina morsitans Westw. in East Africa, is now extended to British West Africa where this species has been found parasitising a Calliphorid fly, Rhyncomyìa pìctìfacìes Big. Puparia of R. pictifacies were collected in the stream-bed sand of dry-season breeding sites of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) and G. morsitans submorsitans Newst. at the following localities in Northern Nigeria: Gamagira, Zaria Province; Mando Road (25 miles NNW. of Kaduna), Zaria Province; Rahama, Bauchi Province. All were collected during January and February 1957. During February, eight adults of Thyridanthrax emerged from a total of 33 puparia of R. pictifacies found at Rahama.


1963 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 497-508 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. T. Baldry

The persistence of DDT deposits, derived from dilutions of an emulsion concentrate, Arkotine D.25, on the leaves of riverine vegetation in the Northern Guinea Savannah vegetation zone of Nigeria was studied in the laboratory by a bioassay method using teneral females of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) as test insects. Irrespective of whether sprayed in the dry or wet season, deposits derived from sprays containing 5.0 per cent. DDT produced by the Warley knapsack sprayer were still reasonably toxic one year after spraying. Deposits derived from sprays having a concentration of DDT varying from 1·25 to 5·0 per cent. DDT were equally toxic when young, but those from the lower concentrations were weathered much more rapidly than those from the 5·0 per cent, sprays. Young deposits produced by Warley and Motoblo sprayers were equally toxic, but deposits from the Motoblo deteriorated more rapidly than those of the Warley.The toxicity of the DDT deposits on leaves varied regularly with the seasons. The various climatic factors that it is thought influenced the variations in toxicity are discussed. Accumulations of wind-blown dust on the leaves during the late dry season and low evaporation rates at the height of the rains appear to be responsible for reduced toxicity at those times; in the early wet season, the occasional violent storm probably washes off the leaves the dust accumulated during the dry season and makes the insecticidal deposits once more available. Heavy rainfall is important in removing the insecticidal deposits from the vegetation, and leaf decay and refoliation are important in reducing the availability of the deposits. The implications of these variations in toxicity and factors that reduce the availability of the deposits are discussed in relation to the eradication of riverine tsetse.Great differences in the rates of foliage decay and refoliation occur between different riverine plants, and it is suggested that a thorough study of this feature in riverine plants and of resting sites favoured by tsetse flies might reveal information that would enable tsetse to be eradicated by selective spraying of certain plant species only.


1912 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Scott Macfie

In Northern Nigeria the dry season begins in October, and ends in March. During this period practically no rain falls, and the highest temperatures of the year are recorded during the day, whilst the lowest annual temperatures occur during the night at this season. A short tornado season occurs at the beginning and end of the dry weather. In the case of Zungeru, where my experiments were carried out, the following is the meteorological return for the year 1910:—


1959 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 617-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Page

A population of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) was studied for three years, between February 1954 and January 1957, at Ugbobigha, on the northern edge of the main rain-forest belt of southern Nigeria. A fly-round was laid out along the banks of a forested stream, running northwards from the forest belt into the savannah woodland, and was divided into four sections representing farmland, wide fringing forest, narrow fringing forest, and the edge of forest.No major seasonal movements of the fly population from one section to another could be detected; it was found that open farmland and the edge of forest with good visibility always yielded the highest catches, whereas catches inside dense forest were always low. Data from other sources showed that at all seasons of the year G. palpalis may be found in small numbers throughout the savannah woodland, even in the absence of water. This species also occurs in very small numbers within the main forest belt, and in village clearings lying within this belt.Apart from an increase in the second and third months of the rains (March–April) and a fall during the fourth and fifth months, the population tends to remain steady at a low level throughout the year. The increase in population is associated with a mean temperature of 79–80°F. (26·1–26·7°C.) and an average saturation deficit of 5·5 mb. These figures agree closely with those found to be optimal for G. palpalis by other workers. The decrease in population is associated with a falling temperature, but more especially with a mean saturation deficit that has dropped below 3 mb. These results agree closely with those found near the northern limit of the range of the species in Nigeria. The favourable period for increase during the wet season lasts for four months in northern Nigeria, but only two at Ugbobigha: this is believed to account for the much lower fly density found in the humid south.Dissections of females showed no seasonal trend in the proportion that were pregnant, nor any cessation of breeding in the heavy rains (August–September). Of 3,130 flies caught, 45·5 per cent, were females, and of the 1,040 females dissected, only 3·6 per cent, were found to be virgin; in northern Nigeria, the comparable figures were 49·1 and 4·0 per cent., respectively. At Ugbobigha, there is no seasonal trend in the percentage of females amongst flies appearing to man. Among the non-teneral males caught, the mean monthly proportion that was hungry ranged from 8 to 22 per cent., but showed no seasonal trend, whereas comparable figures from northern Nigeria ranged from 24 to 43 per cent.; this suggests that G. palpalis requires food less often in the humid conditions of Ugbobigha, or possibly that game is more numerous.Of 1,635 examples of G. palpalis dissected, 2·1 per cent, were found to have mature infections of trypanosomes; of the latter, about two-thirds belonged to the Trypanosoma vivax group and about one-third to the T. congolense group. There was no difference in the infection rates of males and females.Very few pupae were found, owing to the low fly population and the extensiveness of the breeding sites under the equable climatic conditions. The temperature of the pupal environment is considerably higher here than in northern Nigeria.The diurnal rhythm of activity of G. palpalis was investigated both in the dry season and the wet. In both, activity increases steadily between 7 and 10.30 a.m., as the temperature rises, and falls steadily between 3.30 p.m. and dusk; peak activity occurs at various times between noon and 3.30 p.m. The numbers caught before 11 a.m., expressed as a percentage of the day's catch, increases at seasons when the temperature is higher. The flies are equally active in overcast weather and full sunshine, but rain reduces activity by more than a half.


1964 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. T. Baldry

The toxicity and persistence under natural field conditions of deposits of dieldrin and isobenzan, derived from dilutions of emulsion concentrates, on the leaves of riverine vegetation in the Northern Guinea Savannah vegetation zone of Nigeria were studied by a bioassay method, using teneral females of Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) as test insects. Although deposits of both insecticides were extremely toxic when first sprayed, neither product was found to have a long residual action, and isobenzan was found to be approximately half as efficient as dieldrin. It is suggested that because of its poor residual action isobenzan will be little used in tsetse control campaigns in areas similar to that in which the investigations were performed.


1961 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 639-642
Author(s):  
E. A. S. La Croix

In March 1957, an outbreak of human sleeping sickness was discovered in the South Mamprussi District of northern Ghana. Temporary measures were initiated at a few villages to provide protection, at water-holes on streams, against attack by the two prevalent species of tsetse, Glossina palpalis (R.-D.) and G. tachinoides Westw., until clearings could be made.These measures consisted of grass-mat passages approximately 8 ft. high, extending from about 75 yd. from the stream down to and around the waterhole. At the water-hole, there was a gap of about 1 ft. between mat and water.These passages were found to be successful in excluding tsetse fly. This suggests several points of interest about G. palpalis and G. tachinoides: that at that time of year and in that type of vegetation, they do not rest higher than 8 ft. above ground; that the portions of human anatomy that showed beneath the matting did not attract the fly; and that these species depend on sight for hunting rather than on smell.The cost of this matting was negligible as compared with the cost of routine clearing, and this method of temporary protection was considered successful for its purpose.


1960 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Davies ◽  
P. Blasdale

An account is given of work carried out during the third year to eradicate Glossina morsitans submorsitans Newst. and G. tachinoides Westw. from an elongated fly-belt situated in the Sudan savannah vegetational zone of Northern Nigeria, which is an important cattle-raising area.The total area of the fly-belt, which is isolated as far as G. morsitans is concerned, measures about 120 miles in length and extends, in places, up to almost 10 miles in width. The country involved forms the flood plains and adjacent uplands of the Komadugu Gana river.Sixty-nine sq. miles were sprayed with DDT during the 1957–58 dry season(between end of January and end of April 1958), and 18 months after completion of work no tsetse has been found in the treated area. These 69 sq. miles formed the dry-season habitat of the fly on this section of the river, and the cost of insecticide and labour involved amounted to approximately £86 per sq. mile. As the zone infested in the wet season greatly exceeded this dry-season concentration area, reclamation costs per sq. mile, when applied to the amount of grazing land made safe for cattle, amounted to much less than the figure quoted.Successful continuation of this project is ascribed to three salient features of the technique employed: —(a) A single application only, of a 3·75 per cent, aqueous suspension of DDT from a wettable powder, is sufficient for complete eradication.(b) A high degree of discriminative or selective spraying is possible: for the elimination of G. morsitans, spraying can be mostly confined to larger tree trunks, in shade, up to a hei ght of about 5 ft.(c) Artificial or natural barriers to isolate each season's work, and so prevent re-invasion, are not necessary where the fly-belt is of a comparatively narrow and elongated nature. Spraying the re-infested area during the following season is more economical.


1978 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 283-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Rogers ◽  
Sarah E. Randolph

AbstractA comparison was made of the efficiencies of catching parties with hand nets and electric back-pack and screen traps for the capture of Glossina palpalis palpalis (R.-D.) and G. tachinoides Westw. in northern Nigeria. Whilst there was little to choose between the various devices during standing catches, one electric back-pack caught up to four times as many G. palpalis as two men with hand nets during moving catches on fly-rounds. Two reasons for the observed variation in success rate of the catching party with hand nets are suggested, and estimates are made of the relative efficiencies of each method at capturing flies during a single traverse of a fly-round. The combined use of the electric back-pack and screen drawn immediately behind the back-pack wearer recorded the arrival height of the flies, whilst hand-net catches tended to reflect the heights at which the flies spent most of their time after arrival. There were differences between the sexes both in arrival height, perhaps related to differences in resting heights on the vegetation, and in the fat and haematin levels of flies caught in hand nets above and below the waist. High ambient temperature reduced the average height of the visits of both sexes to human bait. The relevance of the results obtained in this study to sampling tsets populations is discussed in relation to various seasonal changes in hand-net samples recorded in the literature.


1980 ◽  
Vol 20 (106) ◽  
pp. 618 ◽  
Author(s):  
AD Wilson ◽  
HJ Banks ◽  
PC Annis ◽  
V Guiffre

Two 1900 t capacity, cylindrical steel bins were sealed to a high standard of gastightness (pressure decay from 1500 Pa to 750 Pa in greater than 220 sec. when full). After being filled with wheat, both bins were purged with an 80% carbon dioxide-20% air mixture. A mean CO2 content of more than 75% (v/v) was achieved using 1.91 t CO2 in bin 1 and 2.13 t CO2 in bin 2. Immediately after purging the atmosphere in bin 2 (but not bin 1) was recirculated from the base to the apex through an external duct using a small fan. The CO2 concentrations in this bin remained above 40% for 14 days, and those at the base and apex differed by less than 5% CO2 during recirculation. The CO2 concentration at the apex of bin 1 fell rapidly and was less than 20% 2 days after purging, while the CO2 level at the base was above 60%. Fourteen days after purging, the recirculation apparatus was transferred to bin 1, reducing the existing concentration differential of 40% CO2 to 4% in 4 days. The gas interchange rate between the bin under recirculation and the external atmosphere averaged from 2.4 to 4.0% day-1. The cost of the CO2 and its application was between 20-25 ct-1 of grain. A naturally occurring infestation of Rhyzopertha dominica and Tribolium castaneum in both bins was controlled by the CO2 treatment and the wheat was exported without need for further insecticidal treatment.


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