Study Guide 1 CRPR 2
Study Guide 1 CRPR 2
Study Guide 1 CRPR 2
CROP PROTECTION 2
Approaches and Practices in Pest Management
(Lecture Materials)
CHAPTER 1
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Crop Protection 2- Approaches and Practices in Pest Management
TOPICS COVERED:
1. THE CONCEPT OF INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT (IPM OR PEST
CONTROL)
a. The current concept of IPM
b. Historical Trend in IPM
2. Economic Concepts
3. Ecological Concepts
4. Human Behaviour and Decision-Making Concepts
Introduction
Agricultural pests are organisms that damage or compete with a crop to reduce
yield or quality. Some examples of this are: y Insects, y Disease causing organisms, y
Weeds, y Rodents, and y Birds. If these pests are not effectively managed or controlled,
they can cause significant losses. While estimates show average losses of 30 – 40%,
complete crop loss can occur, especially for smallholder farmers in low
income
countries, as they may lack knowledge or lack effective control options. Pests need to
be managed to protect livelihoods. As agronomists and pest management experts, you
need to help farmers understand that pests can economically impact their farms and
thus need to be managed, and then explain how to manage pests without creating
unnecessary risk to human health and the environment. You should be able to explain
why they should adopt IPM.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is a common-sense approach that provides
an effective species management framework. IPM practices reduce dependency upon
toxic pesticides, subsequently mitigating exposure to these hazardous chemicals. IPM,
when practiced proficiently, is truly a method of ecosystem stewardship that combines
cultural, physical and biological methods to keep the populations of undesirable species
in balance at tolerable levels. Ideally, IPM involves using chemical control methods only
as a last resort and when used, incorporating the least-toxic control method available
after exhausting all possible alternatives. Unfortunately, the concept of IPM has often
become elusive in regulatory language and adulterated in practice.
IPM is an ecologically based management. This approach value the presence of non-
target species, predators and beneficial organisms. It aims to reduce or suppress the
number of pests in the field or site. It does not eliminate or kill all pest in an area.
Learning Objectives
At the end of the discussion the students must be able
to:
1. What is a pest?
2. Write down 10 organisms that you consider to be a pest. These can be animals,
insects, plants or plant diseases that affect you, your home, your yard or the
school
3. What do you think people in medieval times do to control pest?
4. Give your opinion about Integrated Pest Management.
CONTENT FOCUS
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Definition of terms and their Implication
• Pesticides- are materials or substances used to kill pests.
Pesticides includes: insecticides, fungicides, bactericides, herbicides,
mollusicides, etc.
nematicides and rodenticides.
• Insecticides- are any substance used to kill insects. However, insecticides also
kill or affect other organisms, man, and animals.
• Ecosystem- ffunctionally independent unit in which there is an intricate &
interdependent among the components” Ex: Pond, River, Forest, tree, desert.
• Agro-ecosystem- is an agricultural area sufficiently large to permit long-term
interactions of all the living organisms in their non-living environment.
• Insect Control -is the performance of any practice that prevents further increase
in insect pest population growth or that suppresses or reduces existing insect
pest population. To many, insect control denotes chemical control.
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Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
A comprehensive approach to pest control that uses a combined means to
reduce the status of pests to tolerable levels while maintaining a quality
environment.”
A method of controlling pest in an economically efficient and
ecologically sound manner. It utilizes all suitable techniques either to
reduce pest population and maintain them at level below those causing
economic injury or to manipulate the population so that they are prevented
from causing injury. IPM strives to prevent the needless destruction of the
environment and human health.
Key points of IPM (what constitutes IPM or Integrated Pest Management). Let’s talk about
those three words:
INTEGRATION is the harmonious use of multiple methods to control single pests or pest
complexes. Focus on interactions of pests, crops, the environment, and various control
methods. This approach considers all available tactics and how these tactics fit with other
agricultural practice used.
PEST is any organism that is detrimental to humans and it includes invertebrates (insects,
mites, spiders, etc.), vertebrates (ground squirrels, mice, rabbits, birds, etc.), weeds, and
pathogens (microorganisms that cause plant diseases). These organisms’ conflicts with
our profit, health, or convenience.
If a species does not exist in numbers that seriously affect these factors, it is not
considered as pest.
MANAGEMENT a way to keep pests below the levels where they can cause economic
damage. Management does not mean eradicating pests. It means tactics that are effective
and economical, and that keep environment damage to a minimum.
Integrated Pest Management, or IPM, is managing crops using many tactics to keep pest
levels below an economic threshold.
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IPM has a broad application:
- Integrates management of all pests.
- Holistic approach, ecologically based.
- Can be applied to any ecosystem.
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IPM is a multidisciplinary endeavor
Economics (decision-making)
IPM is a multidisciplinary endeavor. It takes from branches of crop science and then
assembles information from the following disciplines:
Agronomy—understanding about the crop and the soils and landscape that the
crop will grow on.
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PRINCIPLES AND CONCEPTS
The first principle you must understand is that and effective
implementation of IPM is based on the agro-ecosystem and agroecology. This is
an important part of maintaining healthy soil and growing a healthy crop with plant that
is strong and vigorous and therefore will be less affected by pest attack. Pest
management actions or pest control interventions should consider the system as a
whole, or they can have unexpected and undesirable results.
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The Integrated Pest Management Strategy, Tactics and Goal
• Avoidance- may be practiced when pest populations exist in a field or site but
the impact of the pest on the crop can be avoided through some cultural practice.
Examples of avoidance tactics include crop rotation such that the crop of choice
is not a host for the pest, choosing cultivars with genetic resistance to pests,
using trap crops and simply not planting certain areas of fields where pest
populations are likely to cause crop failure.
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• Monitoring and proper identification of pests through surveys or scouting
programs, including trapping, weather monitoring and soil testing where
appropriate, should be performed as the basis for suppression activities. Records
should be kept of pest incidence and distribution for each field or site.
1.Identify pests, their hosts and beneficial organisms before taking action.
- The cause of the problem and associated plant or animal species must be correctly
identified. For many plant problems, the damage is not caused by insects! If you can't
find a pest, consider other causes, including abiotic (non-living) disorders, such as
sunscald, wind or cold damage, inadequate moisture, etc.
Routine monitoring of both pests and natural enemies, also known as beneficial
organisms, is an important part of IPM. Methods of monitoring include visual inspection,
pheromone and sticky traps, and sweep nets. Document and track both pest and
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beneficial organism population numbers. The ratio of natural enemies (usually insects)
to pests should be taken into account before a pesticide is applied.
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The demands of a growing world
population for food and fiber require
farmers to produce more crops on existing
farmland. To increase these yields
requires continuous improvement of
agricultural technologies to minimize crop
losses. The challenge is to do this while
protecting the environment.
Why have pest managers shifted to IPM when chemical pesticides so often succeed at
controlling pests? There are many reasons to broaden pest management beyond the
use of chemicals.
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that consume pests, leaving few natural mechanisms of pest control.
References:
https://extension.unr.edu/publication.aspx?PubID=2626
Hi students! If you see this it means that you’re one step ahead. Congratulations!
““No matter how busy you may think you are, you must find time for reading, or
surrender yourself to self-chosen ignorance.”
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