“…Jarring (Wylie 1951) is labor-intensive, dislodges ripening fruit, and may damage trees. Pyramid traps (Prokopy and Wright 1998, Schmitt and Berkett 1995, Prokopy et al 2000, Pinero et al 2001, Johnson et al 2002 tend to blow over in high winds and can warp in wet weather, whereas screen traps (Johnson et al 2002) only work well on trees with trunk circumference greater than the length of the trap bottom (Ϸ38 cm). Both traps have performed best when used to monitor the high plum curculio populations present in unsprayed research orchards; however, neither trap was sensitive enough for monitoring the emergence of the summer plum curculio generation in peach in Georgia and South Carolina (D. L. Horton, unpublished data) or in Arkansas and Oklahoma (Johnson et al 2002).…”