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The ez-Migration trap—a two-headed Malaise trap—is a modular field-sampling tool that intercepts insects on both sides of a vertical barrier and directs them into separate bottles. This design reduces orientation bias and supports studies of insect migration as well as local dispersal movements.
Classical Malaise traps often show directional bias, with collection heads filling unevenly depending on sun position, wind direction, or insect flight path. By placing a head at each end, the ez-Migration trap minimizes this effect and keeps samples from opposite flight directions separate, yielding clearer data on movement patterns.
Assembly mirrors that of the ez-Malaise trap: shock-corded poles connect in minutes, clips attach the fabric, and stability requires a minimum of two guy ropes. Its portability makes it suitable for both long-term monitoring and quick surveys.
Placement: Position the central barrier across insect movement corridors (trails, forest edges, riparian strips); orient roughly perpendicular to expected flight paths. Avoid tight vegetation that blocks airflow.
Directional metadata: Label the two collection heads consistently (e.g., Head A/Head B or compass bearings) and record orientation at setup for directional comparisons.
Sun & wind: Note the sun position and wind direction during deployment and servicing. Re-tension lines after strong wind or a heavy catch to maintain panel shape.
Stability: Nearly freestanding; stability in open landscapes requires a minimum of two guy ropes, with additional ropes recommended in windy conditions.
Servicing: Empty and replace bottles on a regular schedule (e.g., weekly), adjusting for temperature and catch volume. Keep the head hardware seated and free of debris.
Preservative & labels: Use a preservative suited to your workflow (e.g., ethanol for morphology/DNA). Labels should include trap ID, head ID, date/time, preservative, and orientation notes.
Multiple traps: Space units ~50–150 m apart to reduce spatial dependence. Record effort in trap-days and note covariates (weather, vegetation structure, edge distance).
Relocation: For short-term surveys, reposition as needed to sample across habitat edges or along movement axes, logging coordinates and orientations each move.