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NATURAL POPULATION OF INSECTS1

2016 
A procedure is investigated for estimating the proportion of vectors capable of transmitting aster-yellows virus in a natural population of Macrosteles fascifrons (Stal), the six-spotted leafhopper. A straightforward method and one used in practice is to collect random samples of the population and cage insects individually with previously unexposed aster test plants. If a plant exhibits aster-yellows symptoms in a given time interval, the insect is classified as a vector, and the proportion of infected plants is an estimator of the proportion of vectors in the population. When large numbers of insects are available, this procedure requires a considerable overhead in plants and cages, and it is desirable to use several insects on each plant. If k insects are caged with each plant, the outcome is still binomial, for the experimenter can distinguish only two types of test plants; infected and non-infected. If p is the probability that a randomly selected insect is a vector, the probability that a plant is non-infected is equal to (1 - p)k. Some properties of the maximum likelihood estimator of p when such a procedure is used are investigated in this paper, and a method for determining the optimum number of insects per plant for certain cost considerations is given. In general, it will be seen that the experimenter should choose k small and n large, commensurate with costs, to insure against the risk of a dangerously inefficient experiment when little or no information is available regarding p.
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