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Insects & Diseases. Integrated Pest management. IPM Defined:. "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.". IPM.
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Insects & Diseases Integrated Pest management
IPM Defined: • "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."
IPM • Pest management, not eradication, is the goal. • Manage pests below the economic threshold.
Economic Threshold • How would you define it? • The point at which the disease or pest infestation begins to diminish the quality of the crop.
Economic Thresholds • Thresholds should be quantitative and grower driven. • For example, thresholds could be based on the average number of pests per trap each week. • the percent of plants or leaves found to be damaged or infested during visual inspection. • the number of pests dislodged per shake sample.
Economic Threshold 80 Avoid exceeding economic injury level 70 EIL 60 Apply controls 50 Pest density ET 40 Averagedensity 30 20 10 0 Time
Economic Thresholds • Vary depending upon the crop. • Bacterial Leaf Spot on Poinsettia: • Devastating! • Bacterial Leaf Spot on Greenhouse Tomatoes: • Not such a big deal. Why? • Insects & diseases on ornamental crops grown in nurseries: • Big deal? Yes or no?
Also called “monitoring’. • Perform weekly. • In greenhouses focus monitoring near doorways, vents and fans. • 1 card per 1,000 square feet. • Yellow: attracts most flying insects • Blue: for thrips • Replace cards on a regular basis.
Sanitation • The goal of sanitation is to eliminate all possible sources of the pest. • weed removal inside and outside the greenhouse. • grass flowering-increase in thripspopulation • weed removal around nurseries. • dispose of dead/diseased plants. • In greenhouses: • quarantine infested plants in a separate room. • medium pasteurization (especially if it contains soil). • algae control-fungus gnats.
Watering • Too much moisture: • leaf diseases • root rots • fungus gnats • algae • Too little moisture: • stresses the plants and predisposes it to disease • hot, dry conditions favor spider mites
Temperature • Plants begin to stress at temperatures of 95 degrees F. and higher. • Temperature fluctuations.
Growing Medium • Should have good aeration/drainage. • Monitor EC.
Variety Selection • Choose insect/disease resistant varieties. • If possible, rotate crops.
Biological IPM Tactics • The use of living organisms to control pests.
Chemical IPM Tactics: • Biorational Pesticides • Conventional Pesticides
Biorational Pesticides: • Insecticidal Soaps • Horticultural Oils • Bacillus thuringiensis-bacteria • Beauveriabassiana-fungus that infects the chitin exoskeleton of many pests • Diatomaceous Earth • IGR’s • kill insects by disrupting their development
Conventional Pesticides • Licensed Applicator • WPS • Re-entry Times • Residue • Resistance • rotate between groups/active ingredients
Aphids • Thrips • Fungus Gnats • Whiteflies • Shore Flies • Leafminers • Mealybugs • Spider Mites
Two-spotted Spider Mite Red Spider Mite