Popular search terms
  • Biosecurity toolkit
  • Contact us
  • What is biosecurity?
  • Farm Biosecurity Program
  • Plant pest responses
  • Animal disease response
  • Farm profiler
  • Toolkit
  • Subscribe
  • About
    • About the Farm Biosecurity Program
    • Emergency animal disease responses
    • Emergency plant pest responses
  • Essentials
    • Farm inputs
    • Farm outputs
    • Ferals & weeds
      • Wild dog biosecurity
    • People, vehicles & equipment
    • Production practices
    • Train, plan & record
    • Videos
  • Toolkit
    • Gate sign
    • Create your own biosecurity kit
    • Declarations
    • Manuals
    • On-farm biosecurity planning
    • Records
  • Crops
    • Cotton
      • Cotton best management practice
      • Cotton product management
      • Cotton pests
    • Feed mills
    • Fruit & nuts
      • Fruit & nut pests
        • Apple and pear pests
        • Avocado pests
        • Banana pests
        • Cherry pests
        • Citrus pests
        • Mango pests
        • Nut pests
        • Papaya pests
        • Summerfruit pests
      • Fruit & nut product management
    • Grains
      • Grains pests
      • Grains product management
      • Grain storage options
    • Honey bees
      • BeeAware website and newsletter
      • Code of Practice and National Bee Biosecurity Program
      • Honey bee glossary
      • Honey bee product management
      • Honey bee pests
      • Honey bee best management practice
      • Beekeeper advisory – mosquito insecticide control during the 2022 Japanese encephalitis outbreak
    • Nursery & garden
      • Nursery & garden pests
      • Nursery & garden product management
      • Nursery & garden best management practice
    • Onions
      • Onion pest threats
      • Onion pest eradication or control examples
    • Plantation forestry
      • Forestry biosecurity practices
      • Forestry pests
      • Hypothetical exotic bark beetle incursion
      • Plantation forestry quality assurance
    • Potatoes
      • Potato pest threats
      • Potato biosecurity areas
    • Sugarcane
      • Sugarcane best management practice
      • Sugarcane biosecurity essentials
      • Queensland Sugarcane Biosecurity Zones
      • Sugarcane pests and weeds
    • Vegetables
      • Vegetable pests
      • Vegetable product management
    • Viticulture
      • Phylloxera
      • Viticulture pests
      • Viticulture product management
  • Livestock
    • Alpacas
    • Beef cattle
    • Chickens
    • Dairy cattle
    • Ducks
    • Eggs
    • Feed mills
    • Goats
    • Horses
      • Mosquito Management for Horses
    • Lot feeding
    • New and emerging livestock industries
    • Pigs
      • Feeding your pigs
      • Controlling mosquitoes around piggeries
    • Ratites
    • Sheep
    • Zoo animals
  • Get help
    • Property biosecurity management planning
  • News
    • E-newsletter
    • Subscribe to Farm Biosecurity News
  • Stories
  • Videos

Smart traps – a new tool in fruit fly management

Print this page
  • Home
  • News
  • Smart traps – a new tool in fruit fly management

Smart traps – a new tool in fruit fly management

Snaptrap smart-trap boxes fit onto standard traps used for insect monitoring

Recently there has been a lot of talk about ‘smart’ traps in fruit fly management, but what are they and what can they do?

In short, smart traps are based on the familiar sticky traps or pheromone traps, but use a combination of cameras or other sensors to provide up-to-date information about what is happening in an orchard and what insect pests are present. Like an automated weather station, a smart trap could greatly reduce the need to visit trap sites in person.

Smart traps have been used for other pests in a number of countries, but more recently there has been an increased interest in the role these could play in fruit fly management across Australia. Amongst the developments underway are RapidAim (CSIRO), TrapView (Adama), and the focus of this article, SnapTrap.

SnapTrap is a trapping system that has been developed and trialled ‘on-farm’ by Kim Khor. SnapTrap, which is an Australian innovation, is a digital camera system mounted onto the standard fruit fly traps used by state governments for pest monitoring, the Lynfield trap. The trap records a high-resolution photo every few hours during daylight and uploads these to the ‘cloud’ where they can be reviewed. Access to the images is via a secure website and can be done on any internet connected device such as a laptop or mobile phone.

Alongside trap contents, SnapTrap also records temperature logs and information from other environmental sensors so that the system can provide degree-day calculations for lifecycle predictions which can assist with improved timing of fruit fly control activities.

The online monitoring system provides an image gallery to flick through with identification of dates and times. Information from these traps can also be individually flagged for review. The system can create a time-lapse video from the photos to make it even easier to quickly review longer periods of time. Plans are also underway to automate the identification of fruit flies within a trap.

SnapTrap is solar powered and connects to the internet through the mobile phone network, so it can be installed almost anywhere that gets sunlight. It has been successfully used even in very low mobile signal locations. It can also use WiFi where available.

What is encouraging in all of these developments is the ongoing investment to provide practical solutions to improve fruit fly management. These systems could also allow growers to get more information and faster information without increasing the time and effort needed to monitor traps.

These technologies will also increase the opportunity to improve the regional understanding of fruit fly behaviour patterns, as well as contributing to improving biosecurity capabilities and market access efforts in the future.

More information about SnapTrap


Reproduced with permission from an article on PreventFruitFly.com.au

Read the latest information on
Foot-and-mouth disease

Read the latest information on
Lumpy skin disease

Read the latest information on
Japanese encephalitis

Subscribe to our newsletter

Farm Biosecurity News

Use our profiler to make your

Biosecurity Toolkit

Latest News
  • 30 April 2025

    Silent invaders: what to watch out for this season
  • 28 April 2025

    The role of growers in the national biosecurity system
  • 28 April 2025

    Protecting Australia’s livestock: the critical role of the Ruminant Feed Ban
  • 28 April 2025

    Prevent, protect, and show with confidence
  • 31 March 2025

    Australia’s national biosecurity system: ready when it matters the most

Emergency Animal Disease Hotline
1800 675 888

Exotic Plant Pest Hotline
1800 084 881

  • Sitemap
  • Copyright
  • Contact us
  • Privacy & Disclaimer
  • Website by Morph Digital