New Zealanders bugged by rise in insects
February was a bumper month for insects, pest controllers say, as the country experienced one of the hottest months on record.
2 March, 2016
Several
places had the hottest Februarys since records began, MetService
said.
Bugged
by bugs: February was a boom time for insects Photo: 123
RF
With
insects thriving in the hot conditions, the pest control industry has
been busy.
Target
Pest Wellington had been answering up to 50 enquiries and handling 20
jobs a day, and manager Tony Behrent said things were busy
industry-wide.
"We're
in contact with other guys in the industry, and we know everyone's
pretty busy. Quite often we can't get to jobs and we're advising
people to ring other companies and see if they can help because quite
simply people need to get things done quickly and if we can't provide
it, try to get it sorted."
It
had been a pretty standard year but February had spiked noticeably,
he said.
"Fleas
have been very bad this year, we've had a lot of flea enquiries. The
Hutt Valley, Kapiti Coast, Palmerston, Manawatu, we've definitely had
an increase in the number of Gisborne cockroaches enquiries. Flies
haven't been particularly bad and I think a lot of that is due to the
dry conditions, flies tend to like a bit of humidity."
Conditions
overall had been ideal for insects.
"It's
been dry but not exceptionally dry. It has been warm, warm at night,
not a huge amount of wind, it's just been very, very good
temperatures for insects to breed in."
With
temperatures cooling down in the Wellington area, Mr Behrent said he
was anticipating a spike in flies over the next week or so.
Pest control products flying out the door
Key
Industries provides a major share of the pest control industry's
products.
Managing
director Frank Visser said the product going out the door in February
was up about 40 percent compared with previous years, with fly, wasp
and ant control products most in demand
"February
in particular has been huge month, I think the weather patterns
around the world and particularly in the Pacific have come down and
created the ideal conditions for the breeding of insect pests, so
February has gone absolutely gangbusters."
MetService
said last month Wellington, Nelson and Dunedin all had their hottest
Februarys since records began.
Auckland,
including overnight and daytime temperatures, averaged 21.9°C over
February, the highest since records began in 1962.
Wellington
had the second warmest month on record, averaging 19.3°C
Entomologist
Ruud Kleinpaste agreed that, while he had not noticed a population
increase at his home in Christchurch, hot temperatures meant insects
moved, fed and reproduced more quickly.
"Bugs
do like the temperature, they like the heat, but they also really
like relative humidity. If you dry out as an insect and you lose
water through your exoskeleton, you're in deep trouble. So the odd
shower and relative humidity - bingo. Increase in numbers, increase
in life cycles and the way they go through it, and fabulous
opportunities to breed."
People
should not necessarily worry if they noticed more insects about, Mr
Kleinpaste said.
"I
think it's time for us to be a little bit more tolerant for insects
around the home because I believe 99.9 percent are doing a fabulous
job that we can actually learn something from. Insects do not know
the concept of waste, everything is a resource and recycling is their
middle name."
'Autumn may not start until April' as warm summer maintains grip on Australia
SMH,
1
March, 2016
Much
of Australia is set to bask in unusually warm and dry weather for the
start of autumn, with little sign of a seasonal cooling off.
The
sixth-warmest summer on record for the country by mean temperatures
masked some regions of exceptional heat.
Tasmania,
for instance, had its hottest summer by almost half a degree, while
Victoria notched its third warmest, the Bureau of Meteorology said
in its seasonal report.
Summer's
not done for large parts of Australia. Photo:
Leigh Henningham
Sydney
was a standout capital, with Tuesday marking its 26th consecutive day
of at least 26 degrees. That's already a week longer than its
previous record for extended warmth with another week of similarly
mild weather to come, including potentially six days above 30.
"Summer's
not keen to give up in its grip on Australia just yet," Andrew
Watkins, head of climate prediction services at the bureau, said.
"Autumn may not start until April."
Hot and dry month
The
lead-up to autumn has been particularly warm, especially across
northern Australia where a short monsoon season left many regions
relatively dry.
The
north has had only one tropical cyclone make landfall, with the
second latest start to the cyclone season in 50 years, the bureau
said.
Summer's
hottest temperature was 47.8 degrees, recorded at a couple of Pilbara
sites - Mardie and Emu Creek - in mid-February.
While
there were several large heatwaves through the summer, many places
have instead recorded long stints of above-average conditions.
Agata
Imielska, head of climate at the bureau's Sydney office, noted the
city's "lack of cool conditions, with just one day [in February]
dropping below the average for the month".
Sydney
Airport averaged 9.6 hours of sunshine a day in February, beating the
previous record by more than half an hours. The average for the month
is 7.1 hours.
"If
you look at the outlook, there are strong odds for day and night
temperatures in March to be above average...across the board,"
Ms Imielska said.
NSW
was among the regions posting a relatively dry month, with state-wide
rainfall less than one-third the average - the driest February since
1978:
March
is typically a transitional month, and the odds swing back to more
normal rainfall and cooler conditions from April, Ms Imielska said.
Fire season not yet over
Blair
Trewin, a senior climatologist at the bureau, said sea-surface
temperatures off south-eastern Australia were relatively warm,
limiting their cooling influence.
The
ongoing dry and warm outlook means that the fire season for many
regions "is definitely not over yet," Dr Trewin said.
South
Australia and Victoria had record hot starts to summer but
temperatures eased back to more normal conditions for the second half
of the season.
The
lack of days with strong north-westerly winds spared the region from
more severe fire weather, with only a couple of days in February with
total fire bans for Victoria, Dr Trewin said.
"March
is looking quite warm, with significantly above-normal temperatures
for the next week," he said.
Towns
like Wagga Wagga and Albury-Wodonga are expecting a string of
temperatures in the high 30s from Thursday, potentially challenging
March records.
"You
can still get prolonged heat in March," Dr Trewin said, noting
that Adelaide had set its record of number of days above 35 degrees
and Melbourne for days above 30 degrees in the past decade.
**** CLIMATE TALK ****
Image/Map:
This shows the sub surface sea surface temps anomalies with the red
which represents El Nino gradually reducing in size one of the
indicators that this El Nino is on its last legs. The Blue represents
cooler than normal ssts in the sub surface which may be the early
signs of a possible La Nina developing later this year. Image is
provided by the BOM.
- NEUTRAL CONDITIONS IN THE PACIFIC BY MAY
- LA NINA MAY DEVELOP BY SPRING
- POSSIBLE NEGATIVE IOD AND RECORD WARM INDIAN OCEAN SHOULD SEE A MODERATE TO HIGH CHANCE OF SWING TO WETTER WEATHER ACROSS MOST OF THE COUNTRY BY JULY/AUGUST.
Via
Facebook
Check
out the sub surface water underneath the equatorial Pacific last four
months... Watch how the red (warmer than normal ssts) starts to
reduce in size & watch the blue patch start to grow in size and
it extends further east (to the right of the pic) which may be the
pre curser to a La Nina later this year.
This
El Nino is now reaching its final stages and should die a slow and
suffering death over the next month or two.
Rainfall
will start to pick up across the country (mostly southern inland
regions) but may not be until April before we start seeing widespread
wetter weather kick in. Warmer than normal weather will continue
across most of the country especially in March with daytime temps
closer to the norm through central and southern oz due to extra cloud
cover, nights however will remain mild.
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