Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Alternative Versions
Tags
Agricultural Activities
citrus
Crops
Entomology
Fruits
International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA
Mediterranean fruit fly
Mountains
NOFAO
Nuclear technologies
Oranges
Pest management
Pests
Phytosanitary measures
Sterile Insect Technology SIT
Trees
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
Sterile Insect Technology in Croatia
18 October 2011, Neretva Valley - International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Entomologist Rui Cardosa visiting a non-SIT or Sterile Insect Technology zone. Sterile insect technology consists of rearing massive quantities of the same pest, sterilizing it by irradiation through a simple radiation device that otherwise causes no harm to the insect. The male insects are fed and later systematically freed in the fields, where they then mate with the pest insects present in the field, producing no progeny so that after the continuous release over several years the pest disappears.
10/18/2011
Country
Croatia
Credit
© IAEA/Louise Potterton
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
1.28 MB
Unique ID
UF11TK5
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Photo-Library@fao.org