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Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe
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Page 1: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Integrated Pest Management

By: Melody Carter-McCabe

Page 2: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

What is IPM?

It stands for

Integrated Pest Management

Page 3: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

"IPM is a sustainable approach to managing pests by

combining biological, cultural, physical and chemical tools in

a way that minimizes economic, health, and environmental risks."

Page 4: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

How do pests affect our crops?

• Before crops are harvested• Decrease plant productivity• Photosynthesis is affected by pests eating leaves• Certain pests can wipe out entire fields and

orchards• Quality Control

• People want pretty fruits & vegetables• People don’t pay money for bugs!

Page 5: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

• Wheat field

• IPM

Why is IPM used?

• Less pesticide use

•Used to produce high quality, abundant crops

•Longer and more productive use of fields

•Increase net profits

•Maintain or improve environmental quality

•Reduce production risks

Page 6: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

How is IPM different than

other pest control options?

Page 7: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Pest Prevention- acting before there’s a

problem

Suppression- acting once there is a problem in

order to eradicate it

Eradication – get rid of all aspects of problem

from the beginning stages

Page 8: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Steps to Implementing IPM Practices:

1. Establish a “tolerance level for pests” for different crops

2. For each pest, establish monitoring guidelines

3. Establish injury levels and action thresholds for each pest species before any treatment

Page 9: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Steps continued….

4. Institute a maintenance program designed to produce a healthy plant/crop

5. If pest populations appear to exceed tolerance levels, implement cultural and biological controls

6. If cultural and biological controls are not sufficient, use least-toxic chemical controls

Page 10: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

What types of control does

IPM implement?

Page 11: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

• Cultural- planting, watering, and pruning

• Mechanical- trapping devices & barriers

• Biological- natural predators & diseases, hormones/pheromones

• Chemical- pesticides and other non-harmful chemicals

Page 12: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Do most growers use IPM?

Many, if not most, agricultural

growers identify their pests before spraying. A smaller subset of growers use less risky pesticides such as pheromones. All of these growers are on the IPM continuum. The goal is to move growers further along the continuum to using all appropriate IPM techniques.

Page 13: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

What IPM is NOT

1) IPM is not a rigid program of management techniques.

2) IPM is not organic farming. 3) IPM is not low input, low yield

farming. IPM strategies can be developed for any level of production or any commodity.

Page 14: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

Continued..

4) IPM is not being tied to any certain company's products or services but rather seeks current, unbiased, science-based information to solve problems.

5) IPM is not static, but rather advances the understanding of agricultural systems and incorporates the intelligent use of existing and new technologies through research and demonstrations in practical situations. IPM seeks to put the best science and the best management practices available to work.

6) IPM is not risky, and scientific studies and research evaluations indicate that IPM reduces economic, human health and economic risks.

7) IPM is not scouting one field on a farm and then using the information to treat all fields on a farm alike.

8) IPM is not doing something just because a neighbor has invoked a certain practice, nor is it taking the advice offered by someone at the local coffee shop.

Page 15: Integrated Pest Management By: Melody Carter-McCabe.

More info at….

• http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/

• http://www.mdipm.umd.edu/

• http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/