View Reports, News and Statistics Related to Your Home State

Better Insect Control When Air is Pulled Down through Grain Bins

Subscribe to our Agriculture Environment News RSS Feed
Category: Agriculture
Type: News
Source: USDA Agriculture Research Service
Date: Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Aeration-blowing ambient air through grain storage bins-has been used for decades to maintain the quality of grain by keeping it cool, as well as to manage stored insect pests. But few recent studies have examined whether it's better to direct air from above or below as a means of using temperatures of 60 degrees Fahrenheit or below to control insects.

To find out, U.S.D.A. (USDA) entomologist Frank Arthur and agricultural engineer Mark Casada experimented with storage bins whose grain masses were cooled with either pressure aeration or suction aeration. Pressure aeration uses fans to push ambient air from the bottom of the bin upwards, while suction aeration involves reversing the fans to pull air from the top downward.

Arthur and Casada work at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Center for Grain and Animal Health Research in Manhattan, Kan. ARS is USDA's chief intramural scientific research agency.

The researchers conducted 2 eight-month trials using 6 metal storage bins with perforated floors and grain storage capacities of 1,250 bushels of wheat. Stored insects examined in the study were rusty grain beetles, foreign grain beetles, hairy fungus beetles, red flour beetles, saw-toothed grain beetles, rice weevils and lesser grain borers.

The data showed that, during the summer, suction aeration cooled the stored wheat's upper portion, or "surface zone," more quickly than pressure aeration, and that the difference correlated to fewer insect pests. For example, in pressure aeration-cooled bins, 3,290 rusty grain beetles and 8,210 red flour beetles were found in surface-zone traps, versus 662 and 722 respectively in suction aeration-treated bins.

Suction aeration's rapid cooling of the grain's surface zone is advantageous because that's where insects initially infest the grain after flying in from outside, according to Arthur.

Larger-scale studies are needed. But one expected benefit to using suction aeration could be reduced reliance on the fumigant phosphine to control insects.

The research, published in the journal Applied Engineering and Agriculture, supports the U.S.D.A. priority of promoting international food security.

  User Comments  
There are currently no comments for this story. Be the first to add a comment!
Click here to add a comment about this story.
  Related Pages  
Alternative Fuels Glossary
... to raise one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit (at sea level). Butane A gas, ... rust) in the fuel system. Cryogenic Storage Extreme low-temperature storage. Bak to Top · ... fuel tank during refueling. Storage II pump controls and onboard refueling ...
Grain Moisture Measurements May Divert Mold, Insect Infestation
Grain storage bins are routinely monitored for temperature to control insect and mold problems. Now an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientist and his colleagues at Kansas State University (KSU) have preliminary research findings showing that ...
New Method Monitors Insects Ravaging Stored Products
... to keep insects such as moths, beetles and their larvae from damaging and contaminating stored ... insecticides and fumigants to keep insects away from a variety of products including grains and cereals, nuts, dried fruits and botanicals. Most pest control ...
Handling-System Changes Can Reduce Grain Mixing
... that there's no unwanted mixing. Zeroing in on the commingling that can occur during grain unloading and storage, a scientist with the Agricultural Research Service recently identified the parts of a grain elevator ...
Harvesting and Storing Wheat--Good News, and Bad
... harvest. That's the word from Manhattan, Kan., where the researcher is counting insects immigrating into grain bins from the outside. Entomologist David W. Hagstrum used traps to monitor 34 grain bins on ...
Corn Contains “Eggs-citing” Biopesticide
... called avidin can give corn insect resistance that lasts from the field to the storage bin. Unlike chemical insecticides that ... integrated pest management initiative. ARS researchers have been developing nonchemical alternatives for controlling insect pests, ...
ARS Research Elevates Grain Storage Practices
... practices--how these practices affect the cost and effectiveness of insect control and how that impacts the economics of moving and storing grain. This is the biggest study of its kind, according to ARS ...
Tiny Bug Could Bring Big Relief to Grain Producers
... quality of grain, and they are easily removed during processing. New methods for controlling insect pests in stored grain products are being studied because insect pests are developing resistance to currently ...
Wee Wasps Vanquish Big Bad Beetles
... tiny, normally harmless wasps about a quarter-inch long can control insect pests in stored grains. Biological control is an important part of integrated pest management for stored commodities such as wheat, corn ...
Timing is Everything When Controlling Insects
... good timing, but stored product warehouse managers can rely on ARS research to help them time insecticide applications to control insect pests. Most U.S. warehouses fumigate 3 to 4 times a year to control moths and other ...
Related Searches
using temperatures usda entomologist frank arthur storage bins
recent studies manage stored insect pests grain storage bins
grain masses grain bins aeration blowing direct air
degrees fahrenheit control insects better insect control
agricultural engineer mark casada   
  Green Tips  
The outdoor porch or post lamp is one of the highest used light fixtures in a home, and is the perfect place to install ENERGY STAR qualified lighting products.
  Featured Report  
Nuclear Testing by Country
View a comparitve chart showing which countries have performed the most nuclear tests

View Report >>

  Green Building  
Sustainable Building Advisor Program- The Next Great Step
Beyond LEED - check out The Sustainable Building Advisor Program....Read Complete Article >>

All Green Building Articles

  Related Headlines  

Obama Rejects Keystone XL Jobs In Favor of Green Energy Dreams - What Next?
Or that there has been no warming for a decade, UN IPCC "science" is crumbling at its foundation, and increasing numbers of climate experts are publicly dissenting from IPCC orthodoxy. Mr. Obama needs environmentalists in his camp, if he expects to be ...
Green Investors Beware: Cheap Natural Gas Might Derail The Renewable Energy Future
"By trimming fuel bills, cheap gas has reduced incentives for energy conservation and efficiency. And it has left solar and wind, despite their own falling costs, heavily dependent on government mandates in California and roughly 30 other states, ...
Intel Crowned as Nation's Largest Green Energy Purchaser
According to the EPA, Intel acquired 2502052000 kWh from solar and wind energy sources. The company said that those 2.5 billion kWh are the equivalent of equivalent environmental impact of taking more than 340000 passenger cars off the road each year, ...