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Area
Coverage & List of Don'ts
Area
Coverage?
File any published "area covered"
claims in your wastebasket. At best, they are, generalized, rules of
thumb. At worst, they are misleading advertising. They certainly shouldn't
be used to compare traps. It is nonsense to say any flytrap will control
insects within "X" square feet of space (even indoors) without,
at least, specifying the species of insects concerned, the type and
condition of the facility, the surrounding environment, and management's
level of concern. The distance at which an insect responds is determined
by lamp type and trap design, of course, but also by the number, visual
acuity, and nature of the specific insect.
Visual
Acuity
Generally speaking, most insects do not
respond to light traps more than a hundred feet away. Houseflies appear to
respond at about 20 to 25 feet with a significant increase at about 12
feet, but just as important is the nature of the response.
Nature Of
The Fly
Many flies will respond immediately to a
flytrap, most do not. In our lab tests with 100 houseflies, pro flytraps
sometimes catch 20 to 30% in the first five minutes, 50 to 60% in 15
minutes, and 100% in less than two hours. On average, however, they have
caught 92% in seven hours, 98% in 24 hours, and 99% in 36 hours. Quite
often, a fly or two will be completely unresponsive for two or even three
days; then suddenly, it's caught. All appear to respond, eventually, but
in their own time. Houseflies appear to go through periods when they are
simply more interested in resting, buzzing around searching for food or
water, or frolicking with a playmate than responding to light (and
vice-versa). This periodic-response-to-light combined with a strong flying
ability make the housefly one tough insect to control. Their filth and
germ dispersal makes it imperative.
A List Of
Don'ts
- Do not use ceiling-hung flytraps in food
processing areas. Use only low, wall mounted, professional flytraps at
low height. And, keep them at least 5ft. (preferably 15 or 20 ft.)
away from open product. Though our traps are escape-resistant
(designed to retain the insect within the device); lightweight insect
fragments can, on occasion, bounce or be blown out of any flytrap
(including glueboards, especially when servicing boards that may have
dried out).
- Do not use light traps where their
attractant light shines directly out glass doors or doors to be open
after dusk. Outside insects can be attracted in.
- Do not use any electric flytraps in
explosion sensitive areas. See the National Electric Code. Remember
that UV from flytraps can color-fade wall paper, fabrics, etc.
- Do not place flytraps in direct
sunlight. Sunlight contains all the wavelengths of energy that both
humans and insects see as light, including the wavelengths that
attract insects to flytraps. This does not mean that the darkest spot
in the room is always the best place for a light trap.
- Do not place UV light traps of any kind
so that employees are required to work continuously in close eye level
proximity (i.e. over a sink or table where an employee would be
stationed continuously within one meter).
- Do not overestimate the ability of light
meters; especially, cheap, little ones. If properly used (and that's
the crux of the matter); they can distinguish an old lamp from a new
one, but "if" and only "if" comparing the exact
same brand and model of lamp. METERS ARE NOT FLIES! They cannot
evaluate trap designs, the comparative effectiveness of different
lamps, or shatter-proof coatings. Only good, honest research with
insects can do that. Seen any?
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