|
Contents
NIR Detects, Destroys Insect
Pests

Maize weevil feeding on corn kernels.
(K3980-3)
|
What's good for Georgia peanuts may also be good for Kansas wheat. An
electric eye that scans all food-grade peanuts for visual defects could one day
do the same for wheat kernels.
For peanuts, it's a proven method for monitoring quality. In wheat, scanning
with near-infrared (NIR) energy can reveal hidden insect infestations that
lower wheat quality.
Agricultural Research Service
entomologists James E. Throne and James E. Baker and ARS agricultural engineer
Floyd E. Dowell are the first to combine NIR with an automated grain-handling
system to rapidly detect insects hidden in single wheat kernels.
The instrument combines a diode array spectrometer and a wheat singulator
developed under a cooperative research and development agreement by Perten
Instruments of Springfield, Illinois, and engineers at the agency's Grain
Marketing and Production Research Center in Manhattan, Kansas. The singulator
separates individual kernels and delivers them to the tester for NIR scanning.
The spectrometer is an optical sensor that can distinguish insect pests from
grain kernels by the different amounts of light energy reflected or absorbed.
"Detecting hidden insect infestations has been a serious problem in the
grain industry," says Baker.
These infestations are important because larvae of the lesser grain borer,
rice weevil, and maize weevil can cause severe damage to wheat. Feeding by
these insects' larvae costs the U.S. wheat industry about $500 million
annually. The NIR system can spot and identify hidden larvae that cannot be
visually detected.
"And with visual examination, a rice weevil looks just like a granary
weevil," says Baker. Studies show that NIR can distinguish between them.
"Each species has its unique spectral signature," adds Dowell,
"based on how much carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen it contains."
Insects' body chemistry determines how much light is absorbed, and the
instrument produces a graph much like a cardiogram with peaks and valleys.
Primary insects like the granary weevil, maize weevil, or lesser grain borer
destroy the whole kernel. Secondary ones, such as the sawtoothed grain beetle
or the rusty grain beetle, come in after other pests have opened things up for
them. They eat small fragments of broken kernels and are not considered
damaging enough to warrant fumigation unless they occur in very large numbers.
So grain storage managers can often save the cost of fumigation if they know
which species has infested the grain.
The researchers have shown that NIR can also kill insects feeding inside
wheat kernels. "NIR is effective, and it's safer than microwave
radiation," says Throne. Studies done in June 1997 showed 100 percent of
rice weevil larvae killed in wheat kernels exposed to NIR.
The researchers envision this technology being used with grain samples or
while grain moves on a conveyor belt at storage and food-processing
facilities.--By Linda Cooke
McGraw, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff, 1815 North
University Street, Peoria, IL 61604, phone (309) 681-6530.
James E. Throne and
James E. Baker are in the USDA-ARS
Biological Research Unit, Grain Marketing and Production Research Center, 1515
College Ave., Manhattan, KS 66502; phone (785) 776-2796, fax (785) 776-2792.
Floyd E. Dowell is also at the
center, in the USDA-ARS Engineering
Research Unit; phone (785) 776-2753, fax (785) 776-2792.
"NIR Detects, Destroys Insect Pests" was published in the
May 1998 issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Click here to see this
issue's table of contents.
[Top]
|