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Success Story
Method uses chemical
that mimics pheromone
of the female melon fly
“Magic Traps” Increase Farmers’ Profits
Photo: IPM CRSP/Miriam Rich
Bangladeshi farmer Nazrul Islam Khan,
with his grandson on his lap, made a
profit on his crops after using a melon fly
trap that scientists from a USAID-funded
project developed.
“It works wonders,” said
Nazrul Islam Khan about
a trap using a chemical
that mimics the melon fly
pheromone that a USAIDfunded
project introduced
to him. “Insects flock to the
bottle to drown.”
Like many farmers in Bangladesh, Nazrul Islam Khan, from the
western district of Jessore, grows cucurbits, plants from the
gourd family that include cucumbers and melons. For many
years, he and his neighbors suffered great losses due to the
melon fly (Bactrocera cucurbitae), an insect that decimates
cucurbit crops.
But after scientists from a USAID-funded program taught him
how to use pheromone traps, Nazrul made a profit. “We call
it the ‘magic trap’ because it magically traps fruit flies,” he
said, referring to a recycled plastic bottle containing water, a
small amount of pesticide, and a capsule of cuelure. Cuelure
is a chemical compound that mimics female melon fly sex
pheromones. When the trap is placed in a field of melons, “it
works wonders,” Nazrul said. “Insects flock to the bottle to
drown.”
Scientists working with the USAID program demonstrated that
the pheromone trap can catch 5 to 18 times as many flies as the
original trap using mashed gourd instead of cuelure. Eliminating
hundreds of flies daily, the traps reduce the cost of pest control,
since farmers no longer apply pesticides so often and their
yields increase. When farmers use cuelure traps together with
mashed gourd traps, their net returns can more than triple.
The news about cuelure spread quickly among Bangladesh’s
farmers. Some were so eager to try the new technique that
they were stealing pheromone traps from research fields before
cuelure had become publicly available.
The project has been so successful that the Bangladeshi
Minister of Agriculture announced he would register and import
enough pheromone to treat almost 1 million acres of cucurbit
crops (an area the size of Rhode Island). Today, thousands of
cucurbit growers in Bangladesh have adopted the use of cuelure
to manage melon flies. Government extension agencies in 15
districts offer farmer field school demonstrations for pheromone
baiting, and in Jessore alone more than 90 percent of the
farmers are now using the “magic trap.”
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