(considerations
before choosing a compost method)
fly
control
One of the most important problems in composting is controlling
flies. Garbage, animal manure, tomato and several other food-processing
wastes, are excellent media for breeding and development of large
fly populations. If adequate control measures are not practiced,
particularly when composting manure, the compost systems will be
infested with extremely large numbers of flies, and create a health
hazard.
Fly breeding can be controlled in composting operations during the
fly season, with little more effort than is normally necessary for
good sanitary composting. Added manure and fresh food scraps in the
composting systems should be kept covered. Fly larvae in composting material may originate from eggs laid in
the material at the place of collection or from eggs laid during
the handling of the material at the compost site. If the latter were
the main source, fly control would be no problem. However, much of
the material is infested with eggs and larvae in various stages of
development, sometimes even at the pupal stage, before arriving at
the compost site. Therefore, material must be prepared immediately
for composting and placed in compost systems where high temperatures
and environmental conditions are unsatisfactory for continued emergence
of flies.
The predominant species of flies encountered in composting will
vary with the area and with the type of material. The variety of
materials available for composting offers satisfactory breeding conditions
for many different species, but generally speaking, the compost operator
does not have to worry about the particular species, since the most
satisfactory control measures in composting apply equally well to
different species.
The
life cycle of the ordinary housefly, "musca domestica," is
usually from about 7 to 14 days when conditions are favorable. The
time of the different stages varies with temperature and other conditions,
but on average it may be considered as follows: egg, 1 to 2 days;
larva 3 to 5 days; pupa, 3 to 5 days; emergence of young fly, 7 to
10 days; and egg laying by new fly, 10 to 14 days. Fly control measures
must interrupt this cycle and prevent the adult flies from emerging.
Some procedures, particularly grinding, turning, and systematic
cleanliness, which are useful in providing compost of good quality
and in destroying parasites and pathogens, are also effective for
controlling flies. Initial shredding or grinding to produce material
more readily attacked by bacteria also destroys a large number of
the larvae and pupae in the raw material. Also, the texture of material
shredded to a maximum size of 2 inches is not as suitable for fly
breeding.
Studies at the University of California on mixed garbage and refuse
demonstrated that after raw material containing considerable numbers
of eggs and larvae had been ground and placed on the pile, no fly
breeding took place using normal composting procedures of turning
every 2 to 3 days. Apparently, the destruction of the larvae by grinding,
mixing, and the structural changes caused by grinding, results in
garbage that is no longer attractive to flies. Heat quickly generated
in compost piles effectively stops flies breeding in refuse containing
a considerable proportion of garbage. However, this is not the case,
for compost materials containing large amounts of animal manure,
food scraps and other fresh and decaying fruits.
When materials attractive to flies and containing large numbers
of larvae and pupae are composted, some of the larvae will move to
other cooler layers and continue their life cycle. The most effective
method of destroying these larvae is frequent turning. Turning compost
stacks at daily interval, when the raw material contains many larvae
and pupae and when fly breeding conditions are favorable, and at
a maximum interval of 3 or 4 days when fly breeding conditions are
not especially favorable, provides good fly control.
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