Research Problem

Manual inspection of the pests (Bactrocera dorsalis) in large mango farms to estimate the infestation levels is time-consuming and labor-intensive. To encounter the problem, automated traps are deployed, however, these traps face challenges in monitoring due to the small size of the flies, the traps tendency to accumulate a high density of insects, complex background  and physical structure of the trap itself.

Findings

  1. Improved mango fruit protection due to timely and efficient interventions of the pests.
  2. Reduced usage of pesticides in the farm (estimated to 50 %).
  3. Early detection of the pest infestation that leads to better understanding of the pest behaviors.

Impact

  1. Increased mango fruit protection, that has direct impact on food security.
  2. Development of predictive models for the pest distribution dynamics that produce valuable information for mango farmers, researchers, and policymakers in the pest management.

Research Credits

  1. Team: Florence Lello, Dr. Mussa A. Dida, Dr. Mbazingwa Mkiramweni, Dr. Martin John, Dr. Elizabeth Mkoba, Dr. Roseline Akol, Hossea Kimaro, Michael Solli
  2. Industrial Collaborators: TARI, AMAGRO
  3. Funders: AdEMNEA-NORHED II project QZA-21/0159
  4. Participating Institutions: DIT, NTNU-Norway, Makerere university, NM-AIST,  SUA.

Published Research