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Offline MrNetworker

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Weather radar catches massive bug swarm
« on: February 22, 2013, 09:15:20 PM »
February 22 , 2013 - Stuff - http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/8340259/Weather-radar-catches-massive-bug-swarm

A vast swarm of bugs that covered much of the northern half of the North Island last night and this morning has been caught on the Metservice weather radar.

MetService do not know what it was and entomologists are puzzled.

But there is a strong suspicion that it is an unwanted Australian heading home.

One was convinced it was the Tasmanian grass grub and another suspected huge swarm of aphids.

"I have no idea," said Bugman Ruud Kleinpaste told Stuff.

"I would suggest go up in the air in aeroplane stick out a butterfly net and see what you catch."

He also speculated it could be a dust storm.

Fellow entomologist Stephen Pawson of Scion, a Crown research institute, had a more pragmatic answer; whatever if was, it was large, and it is going to be coming in on the surf at Piha and Muriwai for the next week or so.

Metservice's Peter Kreft told Stuff the unknown insects began swarming over the Waikato region around 9pm yesterday.

"They were pushed by the south easterly wind north toward Auckland," he said.

By around 7am today the massive swarm was out over the Tasman Sea, west of Auckland.

"We see this from time to time, but this one is a very good example of it."

Kreft said the weather service was not sure what it was.

"We strongly suspect the echo is swarms of insects," Metservice says.

"To show up in radar imagery like this, they must be about as large as, and as numerous as, precipitation particles....

"We see this from time to time, but this one is a very good example of it."

Pawson said at a guess the timings favoured Tasmanian grass grub (aphodius tasmaniae), an introduced agricultural pest.

"It is the right time of year for them to emerge. They can come out in massive numbers," he told Stuff.

"Its right time of year, right time of day and to a degree - and I am not an expert on Tasmanian grass grub - but we've had drier conditions."

He said the weather conditions had to be just right and they would have been influenced by the light southerly front.

A similar emergence had occurred in Canterbury some years ago and they all washed up in big waves on the beaches near Christchurch.

And another emergence occurred between Christchurch and Ashburton on the night of January 23.

Pawson said there had been a lot of cases of this aboard. The best known was the mountain pine beetle in the Pacific north west of America. That swam covered an area larger than that of New Zealand.

Hort Research says the beetles are 10-12 mm long and they make tunnels in the soil in which they stay during the day.

Its larvae feed on the foliage of grasses, clovers, and lucerne in pastures, home gardens, and recreational grassland and turf. They bite off pieces of leaf, which they drag to their burrows to eat later.

"Tasmanian grass grubs live in light soils in the coastal areas of Canterbury (particularly), Marlborough, Auckland, and Northland. Infestations tend not to cover wide areas, but are patchy and severe over relatively small areas of up to one hectare," Hort Research says.

"The beetles fly at dusk on still, warm nights between mid January and mid March.

"Dense swarms aggregating around street or shop lamps in urban areas are common."



Offline Weather Display

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Re: Weather radar catches massive bug swarm
« Reply #1 on: February 23, 2013, 06:27:09 AM »
you can rule out tasmanian grass grub for starters (as they only occur in light sandy type soils (e.g we have had them here in the past), and you would need to have had a build of grubs in the first place (both not the case)
instead it was an inversion layer that builds up after sunset...been happening alot on the rain radar in the evening (i.e air cools off at the surface)
but there was a SE wind change that moved through which then blew that inversion layer out to the NW
(insects dont get blown along by the wind like that (especialy as it was only a light wind)), either

plus there has been no reports of anyone seeing the insects that I know of (and they supposedly flew right over here)

Brian
Awhitu, SW of Auckland


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