Insect Rearing Sleeve (L40 x W20 cm) [pack of 12]

  • Model:DC3000W-S_12P
 
Ordered Quantity 1 2-3 4+
 Discount -0% -5% -10%
Price per Unit $215.06 CAD $204.30 CAD $193.55 CAD

** Attention Valued Customers,

In May 2011, we made a minor modification to this rearing sleeve. The mesh count is 104 x 94 mesh/square inch (changed from 100 x 80 mesh/square inch). Please note this change before making purchases.

Made of fine Nylon netting (104 x 94 mesh), these insect rearing sleeves solve problems of studying insects in-situ. Each sleeve has a large clear window for observation, o­ne full-length zipper that allows the sleeve to open flat, and long strings for sealing the ends around branches. Sleeves of the same size may be zipped together to gain diameters required to enclose sections of tree trunks.

Pack Contents
12 x Sleeves

Click to Search for Studies Using This Product Line

Collection of related articles from the last 10 years:
Efficacy of chemicals for the potential management of the Queensland fruit fly Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt)(Diptera: Tephritidae). Reynolds et al. (2017). Insects, 8(2), 49.
Unraveling the host plant alternation of Cacopsylla pruni–adults but not nymphs can survive on conifers due to phloem/xylem composition. Gallinger & Gross (2018). Frontiers in Plant Science, 9, 484.
Aphid-infested beans divert ant attendance from the rosy apple aphid in apple-bean intercropping. Pålsson et al. (2020). Scientific Reports, 10(1), 1-12.
Addition of nectar sources affects a parasitoid community without improving pest suppression. Miall et al. (2021). Journal of Pest Science, 94(2), 335-347.
Transmission of Grapevine Red Blotch Virus by Spissistilus festinus [Say, 1830](Hemiptera: Membracidae) between Free-Living Vines and Vitis vinifera ‘Cabernet Franc’. Hoyle et al. (2022). Viruses, 14(6), 1156.
Fishing for flies: Testing the efficacy of “stink stations” for promoting blow flies as pollinators in mango orchards. Finch et al. (2023). Journal of Pollination Ecology, 79-99.
Host Status of Persian Lime (Citrus latifolia Tan.) to Oriental Fruit Fly and Mediterranean Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Hawai’i. Follett et al. (2024). Insects, 15(10), 799.