This technique could also be used for monitoring rare and endangered Pine Barrens lepidoptera, some of which will come to sugar baits. Obtaining a photo of a larva that has triggered an electronic mechanism placed on its food plant could assist in identification. The development of a system against Spotted Wind Drosophila (Drosophila suzukii) is in progress, and we hope to make it public before Spring 2018. It does not concern itself with pesticides, pheromones, nor vinegar-yeast traps. Because our lepidoptera studies link to cancer studies for both plant and fish models of cancer, this Trilogy should go some distance in deciphering some of the mysteries of the disease. There are a few specific moths and butterflies of interest for New Jersey on this trajectory.
Bark beetles and Emerald Ash Borers should seriously come under the sway of the power of a (reliable) gopro, and no one has thought of preventing beetles from getting (out [italics]) of the trees they infect? If trees are wrapped at the trunk, no beetles can get to the crown, because they emerge (before [italics] they fly to the crown). How difficult is that when the weeks of their emergence are known locally? Should this info remain esoteric amongst entomologists and foresters? Delirious. A study from British Columbia once determined just how many bark beetles had to die within a certain space to prevent an epidemic. We're almost afraid to ask: "Could a Commodore 64 drive these deadly critters mad if it knew how to control a HeNe laser?" A HeNe certainly can drive ants berserk. Nature, then, has made a mistake: it forgot to add eye-lids.
Regards,
Mike Lansing
Caddy Shack II, USA