Among the primary insect pollinators of tobacco is the large family of moths, which includes among others the hornworm moths, budworm moths and army worm moths--each group comprised of several species. Cross-pollination studies of tobacco have demonstrated that un-bagged tobacco can cross with other varieties when grown with a separation of up to 1/2 mile.
A new study, which included mathematical modeling and direct experimentation of insect pheromone detection in turbulent air has clarified that separation distance.
Bob
A new study, which included mathematical modeling and direct experimentation of insect pheromone detection in turbulent air has clarified that separation distance.
One thousand meters converts to 0.62 miles. So, in tobacco that is visited by any variety of moth which feeds on the nectar of tobacco blossoms, open-pollinated varieties should be separated by at least 1/2 mile.Massimo Vergassola said:...pheromones emitted by female moths can be perceived by males located within a so-called "cone of detection" extending downstream as far as 1,000 meters away. They also found that pheromone signals are most commonly detected as intermittent "whiffs" that last only a few milliseconds, interspersed with periods below the insects' sensitivity threshold, which last from few milliseconds to tens of seconds.
Vergassola, who was initially trained in statistical physics and now works at the intersection of biology and physics in a mathematical discipline called "quantitative biology," said the results could also be applied widely in agriculture...
http://phys.org/news/2014-10-physicists-longstanding-puzzle-moths-distant.html
Bob
