@JKim
What does your set up look like with the fluorescent lamps? And where can I get the blacklight tube?
@Oak
The setup I mentioned in the previous post is from very long time ago, over 10 years. That's when I was a high school teenager. That setup however, attracted about 400 specimens of
Euetheola rugiceps, away from any street lights. Two lights alone attracted that many specimens with about that many
Cyclocephala lurida. By the way, that is the largest number I ever collected compared to any street lights I have ever been to. Nowadays, I just don't go collect any of those two genera, so I haven't collect much more than 100 time to time, but that huge number in the past is thanks to the battery powered lamps in that link.
Sure,
E. rugiceps and
C. lurida are VERY common, and abundantly occur in the State Louisiana. But I never saw such a huge number in a single street light. I can assure that I could collect other larger scarabs with those if I go to a right place where they occur.
View attachment 1672
This image above is an over-exposure image for your reference, of my current setup.
One 400-Watt metal halide + Three 18-Watt UVB operated with 1000-Watt portable generator.
I purchased UVB tubes in bulk from Amazon (manufactured by GE). It has been out of stock for the past couple months, so I don't really know where else to look for. This white, real UVB tubes aren't usually available in local hardware stores simply, because they are not a everyday tubes being used. Your only luck would be Amazon from other manufacturer or elsewhere in eBay, light bulb online retailers, etc.
A metal halide is HID light, so you need a power ballast connected to it in between a bulb and a power source (a portable generator in my case). In case of UVB, unless you diy it, a fixture will already have that ballast inside for you.