Pest Management PDF
Pest Management PDF
Pest Management PDF
This Section describes the development of IPM and the cultural, biological,
mechanical, physical, chemical, and legal control methods used in IPM.
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the difference among the Economic Damage, Economic
Injury Level, and Economic Threshold.
2. Identify the three elements of a successful IPM program.
3. Provide two reasons why pest management has shifted from
routine pesticide application to IPM.
Terms to Know:
w Economic damage (ED)
w Economic injury level (EIL)
w Economic threshold (ET)
w Host
w Integrated pest management (IPM)
w Pest
w Pest signs
w Pest symptoms
Identification is important
whether you are The Four Main Groups
dealing with an insect, of Pests
weed, plant disease, or
vertebrate. Be certain w Weeds – undesirable plants.
any injury or observed w Invertebrates – insects, mites,
damage is actually due ticks, spiders, snails, and slugs.
to the identified pest and w Disease agents or pathogens –
not some other cause. bacteria, viruses, fungi,
Misidentification and nematodes mycoplasmas, and
lack of information about other microorganisms.
a pest could cause you
w Vertebrates – birds, reptiles,
to choose the wrong amphibians, fish, and rodents and
control method or apply other mammals.
the control at the wrong
time—these are the most
frequent causes of pest-
control failure. Keep in
mind that plants may be
damaged by non-living
agents, such as weather
extremes, air pollutants,
road salt, and inadequate
or excessive fertilization.
Sometimes this damage
Photo: National Pesticide Applicator Certification Core
is mistaken for that Manual, NASDARF
caused by living pests.
w Understand the life cycle and habits of the pest. Some control
methods will work only if they are used at the right time.
w Decide whether the infestation is serious in terms of
economic loss.
w Compare the costs and benefits of various control methods.
w Make plans for the future. Not every part of an IPM program
can be put into effect immediately. Some tactics, such as planting
resistant varieties or rotating crops, require long-range planning.
The presence of a pest does not always cause a loss in quality or quantity
of an agricultural product. To justify the cost of control, pest populations
must be large enough to cause significant damage. Using IPM can help
agricultural producers to determine if the benefits of pesticides and other
pest-management tactics exceed the costs of control. If benefits don’t exceed
costs, time and money are wasted. A number of economic concepts are
helpful in determining the point at which it pays to use pesticides or other
treatment:
w Monitor your fields and keep records. Each time you visit your
fields, make a note of crop and
pest conditions—record crop
yields and quality, and record any
counts on pest populations.
w Record control measures.
Records should include dates,
weather conditions, pest levels,
application rates and timing, and At the end of each growing
costs. Good records are a guide season, evaluate how well
if the same problem occurs. They your IPM program worked.
Photo: NRCS
are also a good legal safeguard.
w Compare effectiveness. Whatever control tactics are chosen, use
a different method on some strips. That way you can compare
methods: which worked better, taking into account costs and
environmental impacts?
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the differences between natural and applied controls.
2. Give an example of each method of pest control: biological,
mechanical, cultural, genetic, chemical, and regulatory.
3. Explain how government may stop the spread of pests.
4. Identify the stage in the life cycle of an annual, biennial, and
perennial plant when it is most susceptible to pesticide use.
Terms to Know:
w Contact pesticide w Residual pesticide
w Mode of action w Selective pesticide
w Pesticide w Systemic pesticide
w Pesticide resistance
Prevention
Prevention, suppression, and eradication are three approaches to maintain
pest damage below economic levels. Prevention includes such things as
planting weed- and disease-free seed and growing varieties of plants
resistant to diseases or insects, sanitation, using cultural controls to prevent
weedy plants from seeding, and choosing planting or harvesting times that
minimize pest problems. Pesticides are sometimes used for pest prevention
as well.
Eradication
Eradication is the total elimination of a pest from a designated area. Over
larger areas eradication may be very expensive and often has limited
success. Large eradication programs are usually directed at exotic or
introduced pests posing an immediate area-wide public health or economic
threat.
Natural controls are the measures that check or destroy pests without
depending on humans for their continuance or success. Natural controls
include climatic factors such as wind, temperature, sunshine, and rain.
Topographic features such as rivers, lakes, and mountains can influence
pest movement. Naturally occurring predators, parasites, and pathogens can
regulate pest populations.
When natural controls have not held pests in check, humans must intervene
and apply pest-management controls. Maintaining populations of natural
enemies by avoiding damaging cultural practices or the indiscriminate
use of pesticides can be one of the most economical means of control. If
pesticides are part of your control program, select types that are known
to be less toxic to natural enemies or, if recommended, apply pesticides at
lower-than-label rates to avoid harming natural enemies. Sometimes it is
possible to modify certain parts of the environment, such as by planting
crops or ground covers, to maintain or enhance natural enemies.
Biological Control
Most pests have natural enemies that control or suppress them effectively
in some situations. Natural enemies, including pathogens and insects, are
being used successfully as biological control agents to manage certain
Mechanical Control
Mechanical control involves the use of devices, machines, and other
physical methods to control pests or alter their environment. Traps, screens,
barriers, fences, and nets are examples of devices used to prevent pest
activity or remove pests from an area.
Cultivation
Cultivation is one of the most important methods of controlling weeds. It is
also used for some insects and other soil-inhabiting pests. Devices such as
plows, disks, mowers, cultivators, and bed conditioners physically destroy
weeds or control their growth and disrupt soil conditions suitable for the
survival of some microorganisms and insects.
Exclusion
Exclusion is a mechanical
control technique that
consists of using barriers to
prevent pests from getting
into an area. Window
screens, for example,
exclude flies, mosquitoes,
and other flying insects.
Patching or sealing cracks, Bird netting is used to protect fruits and other crops from
crevices, and other small bird damage. Photo: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
openings in buildings can
exclude insects, rodents, bats, birds, or other pests. Fences and ditches
make effective barriers against many vertebrate pests. Wire or cloth mesh
excludes birds from fruit trees. Sticky material painted onto tree trunks,
posts, wires, and other objects prevents crawling insects from crossing.
Cultural Control
The goal of cultural control is to alter the environment, the condition of
the host, or the behavior of the pest to prevent or suppress an infestation. It
disrupts the normal relationship between the pest and the host and makes
the pest less likely to survive, grow, or reproduce. Cultural practices and
sanitation are two examples of cultural control.
Cultural Practices
Many cultural practices influence the survival of pests. In agricultural
crops, selection of crop plant varieties, timing of planting and harvesting,
irrigation management, crop rotation, and use of trap crops help reduce
populations of weeds, microorganisms, insects, mites, and other pests.
Weeds also can be managed by mulching (with plastic, straw, shredded
bark, or wood chips) and by using cover crops.
Sanitation
Sanitation, or source reduction, involves eliminating food, water,
shelter, or other necessities important to the pest’s survival. In crop
production, sanitation includes such practices as removing weeds that
harbor pest insects or rodents, eliminating weed plants before they produce
seed, destroying diseased plant material or crop residues, and keeping field
borders or surrounding areas free of pests and pest breeding sites. Animal
manure management is an effective sanitation practice used for preventing
or reducing fly problems in poultry and livestock operations.
Chemical Controls
Chemical controls are pesticides that are either naturally derived or
synthesized. Pesticides often play a key role in pest management programs
Pesticides also vary in their selectivity. Fumigants, for example, are non-
selective, controlling a wide variety of pests—fungi, insects, weeds,
nematodes, etc. Some non-selective herbicides control any plant given a
sufficient dose. In contrast, selective pesticides control only certain species
of pests or affect only a certain stage of pest development. For example,
certain herbicides control broadleaf weeds while not harming grasses, and
ovicides kill only the eggs of certain insects, mites, and related pests.
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Pesticides may move in various ways after they come in contact with a
host. Systemic pesticides are absorbed through leaves or roots and then
transported within the treated plant. Similarly, systemic insecticides can
be eaten by or injected into livestock to control certain pests. By contrast,
contact pesticides are not absorbed by treated plants or animals. These
pesticides must directly touch the pest or a site the pest frequents to be
effective.
Eradication
Eradication is the total elimination of a pest from a designated area; often,
these pests are under quarantine restrictions. When eradication is required,
the geographical extent of pest infestation is determined and control
measures are taken to eliminate this pest from the defined area. Procedures
may include an area-wide spray program, releasing sterile insects, using
mechanical and cultural practices, and intensive monitoring for pests within
and around the borders of the infested area.
Pesticide Resistance
Pesticide resistance can be defined as the ability of an insect, fungus,
weed, rodent, or other pest to tolerate a pesticide that once controlled it.
Resistance develops because intensive pesticide use kills the susceptible
individuals in a population, leaving only the resistant ones to reproduce.
Initially, higher labeled rates and more frequent applications are needed to
control resistant pests. Eventually, however, the pesticide will have little or
no effect on the pest population.
susceptible individual
Continual use of pesticides from the same chemical class, such as all
organophosphate or all pyrethroid insecticides, increases the likelihood
that resistance will develop in pest populations. Frequent applications
and persistence of the chemical further increase the chances of resistance
occurring. Finally, the spread of resistance through a pest population can
occur much more rapidly in pests that have many generations per year and
many offspring per generation, such as insects, fungi, and rodents.
Managing Insects
There are more insects in the world than any other living creature. More
than one million species have been identified. Of these, fewer than 1
percent of insect species can be considered pests, and very few of them
are serious agricultural pests. Many insects are important as scavengers,
predators, parasites, and plant pollinators.
Insects can cause injury to plants, animals, and humans in several ways.
Insects injure plants by reducing the yield or quality of crops, spread plant
diseases or harm the beauty and economic value of horticultural crops.
Common symptoms of insects on plants include:
w Chewing on leaves, fruits, seed, and roots.
w Tunneling in stems, leaves, or roots.
w Sucking plant juices from leaves, stems, roots, fruits, and flowers.
w Initiating galls or other plant malformations.
Even after plants are harvested, insects can cause further losses by:
w Feeding on stored products.
w Contaminating raw or processed agricultural commodities.
Plant diseases are often classified according to the symptoms they produce,
for example: blights, mildews, rots, or mosaics.
The first step in a parasitic disease cycle occurs when a fungus spore,
nematode egg, bacterial cell, or virus particle (an inoculum) arrives at a
part of the plant where infection can occur. This step is called inoculation.
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If environmental conditions are favorable, the parasite will begin to
develop. This step is called incubation, and at this stage control is most
effective. The next stage occurs when the parasite gets into the plant; this
step is called infection. When the plant responds to the invasion of the
pathogen in some way, it is considered diseased.
Managing Weeds
Weeds are plants that reduce crop yields and quality, result in less efficient
land use, and diminish enjoyment of turf, ornamental plants, and outdoor
recreation areas.
The weeds that are the most serious problems are those that resemble
the crop in physical characteristics, growth habits, and requirements for
soil, water, nutrients, and light. Broadleaf weeds are often most difficult
to control in broadleaf crops, and grass weeds in grass crops. Another
problem with controlling weeds is that some production methods,
especially cultivation, favor some weeds.
Most weeds have common names like cocklebur or crabgrass. The trouble
with common names is that people in different places may use different
names for the same plant. Herbicide labels and publications that give weed-
Summer Annuals:
control information generally use standardized common names. You need
- Crabgrass to know the standardized common name of a weed so you can choose the
- Foxtails proper control method.
- Cocklebur
- Pig weed
- Lambsquarter How Weeds Grow and Reproduce
- Kochia To control weeds, you need to know something about how they grow and
- Black nightshade
reproduce.
- Velvet leaf
- Common ragweed
- Wild oat Life Cycles
Winter Annuals:
Weeds can be classified as annuals, biennials, and perennials. Annuals
- Field pennycress
- Shepherd’s purse are plants with a one-year life cycle. They grow from seed, mature, and
- Annual bluegrass produce seed for the next generation in one year or less. Summer annuals
- Peppergrass are plants that result from seeds that germinate in the spring, produce seed,
Biennials: and die before winter each year. Winter annuals are plants that grow from
- Burdock
seeds that germinate in the fall, overwinter, produce seeds in the spring and
- Musk thistle
- Bull thistle die before summer each year.
Perennials:
- Quackgrass Biennials require two years to complete their life cycles. They grow from
- Canada thistle seed that germinates in the spring. They develop heavy roots and compact
- Field bindweed
rosettes or clusters of leaves the first summer. Biennials remain dormant
- Yellow nutsedge
- Sowthistle through the winter; in the second summer they mature, produce seed, and
die before winter.
Seeds
One key to weed control is preventing the production of weed seeds. This
is true whether you are trying to control annuals, biennials, or perennials.
Weed seeds have certain characteristics which make them very difficult to
control:
w Large numbers. Weed species often produce enormous numbers
of seeds. For example, a single pigweed plant may produce 100,000
seeds.
w Tolerant of extreme conditions. Weed seeds are notably tolerant
of extremes in temperature, precipitation, and variations in oxygen
supply.
w Long-lived. Weed seeds may remain alive in the soil for a great
many years. Only a small percentage germinate in any single year;
the remaining seeds stay dormant and germinate in future years,
when temperature and oxygen conditions are more favorable.
w Easily spread. Weed seeds are effectively spread by wind, water,
animals (including humans), or machinery, and in crop seed, feed
grain, hay, straw, and manure.
Chemical Control
Chemical control through the use of herbicides is the most common method
of weed control in agriculture. Herbicides work in different ways. Here are
the most common types of herbicides:
w Selective herbicides are herbicides that are more toxic to some
kinds of plants than to others. Selectivity depends on such things as
plant age, rate of growth, and plant form.
w Non-selective herbicides are toxic to all plants. Some non-selective
herbicides can be made selective to certain plants by varying the
dosage, directing the spray to a specific site, or choosing spray
additives such as wetting agents. Selective herbicides can be made
non-selective by manipulating the same factors (for example, by
increasing the dosage to kill more types of plants).
w Translocated herbicides can be absorbed by leaves, stems,
or roots and moved throughout the plant. Root absorption and
translocation take place in water-conducting tissues; leaf or stem
absorption and translocation take place mainly in food-conducting
tissues.
w Contact herbicides are toxic to living cells upon contact. They do
not translocate in a plant. Contact herbicides destroy only
the above-ground parts of plants and are only effective against
annual weeds.
w Soil sterilant herbicides are non-selective herbicides that kill
all plants and prevent weeds from becoming reestablished for a
relatively long time.
Herbicides can also be classified according to when they are applied: before
planting (pre-plant), before seedlings appear (pre-emergence), and after
seedlings appear (post-emergence).
Environmental conditions
w Soil moisture allows herbicides to work most effectively. If the soil
is too dry, the herbicide may evaporate. If it is too wet, the herbicide
may not make contact with soil particles. Warm, moist soil may
increase microbial and chemical activity, causing herbicides to
break down more rapidly. But dry soils may prevent chemical and
microbial activity, reducing degradation and causing the herbicide
to remain in the soil the following year.
w Rainfall, irrigation and flooding may cause soluble herbicides
to leach downward through the soil. This may be desirable with
relatively insoluble herbicides, but with more soluble herbicides,
leaching may cause crop injury. Heavy rainfall may result in poor
weed control or possible crop injury, depending on the solubility
of the herbicide. With pre-emergence herbicides, water is needed
to carry the chemical into the soil where the weed seeds are
germinating. Rain and irrigation also provides moisture to help
the weed seeds germinate so that they can absorb lethal amounts
of herbicide. With post-emergence applications, rainfall may wash
herbicides from leaf surfaces, resulting in poor weed control.
w Humidity affects post-emergence herbicide penetration and
absorption. High relative humidity indicates favorable soil moisture
conditions for rapid plant growth, a time when plants are very
susceptible to herbicides.
w Dew on the weeds or crop when post-emergence herbicides are
applied may increase or decrease the activity of some herbicides,
depending on how quickly the chemical is absorbed by plants
and how the chemical kills plants. The presence of dew can also
increase crop injury with some post-emergence herbicides.
w Temperature affects the rate of plant growth and plant suscep-
tibility to herbicides. Some herbicides evaporate quickly at high
temperatures.
w Sunlight may destroy some herbicides if they are left on the soil
surface for long periods.
More details on herbicides and other weed control methods can be found
in the University of Minnesota Extension Service Bulletin AG-BU-3157
Cultural and Chemical Weed Control in Field Crops. This bulletin can
help you plan an effective and economical weed-control program.
As with other IPM programs, the first step in control is to detect and
identify the problem.
Know the physical characteristics and life habits of most animal species
that may be present in a given situation.
Choose control measures that are effective, selective, humane, and cause
the least possible environmental damage, such as traps, sound,
or barriers.
Know the local, state, and federal regulations that apply. It is especially
important to know which animals are protected by the federal and
state government. See Chapter 5: Protecting the Environment for more
information on regulations protecting wildlife.