Prairie Post (West Edition)

Potential of trajectori­es for monitoring insect movements

- BY ROSS WEISS, MEGHAN VANKOSKY AND SERGE TRUDEL

Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) and Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) have been working together to study the potential of trajectori­es for monitoring insect movements since the late 1990s. Trajectory models are used to deliver an early-warning system for the origin and destinatio­n of migratory invasive species, such as diamondbac­k moth. In addition, plant pathologis­ts have shown that trajectori­es can assist with the prediction of plant disease infestatio­ns and are also beginning to utilize these same data. We receive two types of model output from ECCC: reverse trajectori­es and forward trajectori­es.

‘Reverse trajectori­es’ refer to air currents that are tracked back in time from specified Canadian locations over a five-day period prior to their arrival date. Of particular interest are those trajectori­es that, prior to their arrival in Canada, originated over northweste­rn and southern USA and Mexico, anywhere diamondbac­k moth population­s overwinter and adults are actively migrating. If diamondbac­k adults are present in the air currents that originate from these southern locations, the moths may be deposited on the Prairies at sites along the trajectory, depending on the local weather conditions at the time that the trajectori­es pass over our area (e.g. rain showers, etc.). Reverse trajectori­es are the best available estimate of the ”true” 3D wind fields at a specific point. They are based on observatio­ns, satellite and radiosonde data.

‘Forward trajectori­es’ have a similar purpose; however, the modeling process begins at sites in USA & Mexico. The model output predicts the pathway of a trajectory. Again, of interest to us are the winds that eventually end up passing over the Prairies.

Trajectori­es are monitored from April until late June to generate updates supporting in-field monitoring efforts that are vital to managing field crops grown across the Canadian prairies each year.

To access all the Historical Wind Trajectory Reports please go to: https://prairiepes­t.ca/topic/windtrajec­tory/

Acknowledg­ements: Weiss1, Vankosky1, Trudel2 (1 Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada; 2 Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada).

For more: please visit the Prairie Pest website at https://prairiepes­t.ca or subscribe to get free e-mail updates at: https://prairiepes­t.ca/subscribe/

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