Integrated Pest Management
Practicing Integrated Pest Management (IPM) can reduce
the quantity of chemical pesticides entering the environment and
can save money. IPM is based on taking preventive measures, monitoring
the crop, assessing the pest damage, and choosing appropriate
actions. Many different tactics are used in IPM, including cultural
practices, biological control agents, chemical pesticides, pest-resistant
varieties, and physical barriers.

Goals of This Chapter
- Understand the benefits and components of integrated pest
management.
- Learn what is meant by the term economic threshold.
- Learn the three types of control used in IPM.
IPM Defined
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is a process consisting
of the balanced use of cultural, biological, and chemical procedures
that are environmentally compatible, economically feasible, and
socially acceptable to reduce pest populations to tolerable levels.
Integrated means that many strategies are used to avoid
or solve a pest problem. These strategies come from different
disciplines, such as disease information from plant pathologists,
weed information from agronomists, and insect information from
entomologists.
Pests are unwanted organisms that are a nuisance to
man or domestic animals, and can cause injury to humans, animals,
plants, structures, and possessions.
Management is the process of making decisions in a systematic
way to keep pests from reaching intolerable levels. Small populations
of pests can often be tolerated; total eradication is often not
necessary.
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Why Practice IPM?
You might be wondering why you should even consider IPM when
chemical pesticides so often succeed at controlling pests. Here
are some reasons for having a broader approach to pest management
than just the use of chemicals.
- Keep a Balanced Ecosystem. Every ecosystem,
made up of living things and their non-living environment, has
a balance; the actions of one creature in the ecosystem usually
affect other, different organisms. The introduction of chemicals
into the ecosystem can change this balance, destroying certain
species and allowing other species (sometimes pests themselves)
to dominate. Beneficial insects such as the ladybird beetle and
lacewing larvae, both of which consume pests, can be killed by
pesticides, leaving few natural mechanisms of pest control.
- Pesticides Can be Ineffective. Chemical pesticides
are not always effective. Pests can become resistant to pesticides.
In fact, some 600 cases of pests developing pesticide resistance
have been documented to date, including common lamb's-quarter,
house flies, the Colorado potato beetle, the Indian meal moth,
Norway rats, and the greenhouse whitefly. Furthermore, pests
may survive in some situations where the chemical does not reach
pests, is washed off, is applied at an improper rate, or is applied
at an improper life stage of the pest.
- IPM Is Not Difficult. Although some of the
terms and ideas may be new to you, practicing IPM is not difficult.
Believe it or not, you will have done much of the "work"
for an IPM approach if you've figured out the problem (the pest),
determined the extent of the damage, and decided on the action
to take. These steps are the same ones used in IPM.

- Save Money. IPM can save money through avoiding
crop loss (due to pests), and avoiding unnecessary pesticide
expense. For example, onion growers who followed IPM recommendations
in 1987 saved more than $23 an acre in insecticide costs. Golf
course superintendents who replace fungicides with organic fertilizers
or composts can save up to $1500 every time a fungicide is not
applied. Applicators are able to save on sprays because the calendar
is not the basis for spraying; the need is.
- Promote a Healthy Environment. We have much
to learn about the persistence of chemicals in the environment,
and their effect on living creatures. However, more cases of
contaminated groundwater appear each year, and disposal of containers
and unused pesticides still pose challenges for applicators.
Even though long-term documentation on the effects of all pesticides
is still unavailable, it is generally agreed that fewer pesticides
means less risk to surface water and groundwater, and less hazard
to wildlife and humans.
- Maintain a Good Public Image. Recent public
outcry about the use of growth regulators and the presence of
pesticide residues on produce has heightened pesticide applicator
awareness of the level of public concern about chemicals. Consumers
are pressuring food stores, which in turn are pressuring producers,
for produce that has been grown with as few pesticides as possible.
Growing food under integrated pest management can help allay
public concerns. Structural pest control professionals can suggest
improvements in housekeeping or structural modifications as substitutes
for chemical control.
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The Basic Steps of IPM
All of the components of an IPM approach can be grouped into
four major steps. The first step is taking preventative measures
to prevent pest buildup, the second is monitoring, the third step
is assessing the pest situation, and the fourth is determining
the best action to take.
Preventative Measures
Many IPM practices are used before a pest problem develops
to prevent or stall the buildup of pests.
- Cultural Controls are those that disrupt the environment
of the pest. Plowing, crop rotation, removal of infected plant
material, sanitation of greenhouse equipment, and effective manure
management are all cultural practices that are employed to deprive
pests of a comfortable habitat. The management of urban and industrial
pests has improved when sanitation programs have been improved,
pest harborages eliminated, garbage pickup frequency increased,
or when lights are installed that do not attract insects.
- Structural Modifications - by preventing support timbers
from soil contact, damage from several different wood destroying
pests can be avoided. Wood absorbs moisture and is more susceptible
to attack by carpenter ants and termites when in direct contact
with the soil.

- Construction Site Sanitation - removing tree stumps
and lumber scraps from construction sites, which are prime food
sources for subterranean termites, can prevent problems in the
future.
- Biological Controls - using natural enemies (biological
control agents) to keep pests in check can be put into place
before pest problems increase. Examples of biological control
agents are beneficial mites that feed on mite pests in orchards,
the milky spore disease that kills harmful soil grubs, and Encarsia
formosa , a wasp that parasitizes the greenhouse whitefly.
Many biological control agents are commercially available.
- Physical Barriers such as netting over small fruits
and screening in greenhouses can prevent crop loss. Physical
barriers are important in termite, house fly, and rodent control.
- Use of Pheromones (natural insect scents) has become
widely used in pest management. Sometimes a manufactured "copy"
of the pheromone that a female insect emits to attract mates
can be used to confuse males and prevent mating. This technique
is used in curbing damage from the grape berry moth.
- Pest-Resistant Varieties are those that are less susceptible
than other varieties to certain insects and diseases. Use of
resistant varieties often means that growers do not need to apply
as many pesticides as with susceptible varieties. Potato growers
control the golden nematode by planting resistant cultivars.
Apple growers can save up to eight fungicide applications a year
by growing Liberty and Freedom cultivars, which resist diseases.
Farmers growing alfalfa and wheat keep several pests at bay by
planting resistant varieties.
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Once a pest manager has taken precautions to prevent pest infestations,
it is important to watch regularly for the appearance of insects,
weeds, diseases, and other pests.
Monitoring (Scouting)
- Monitoring pests involves:
- regular checking of the area;
- early detection of pests;
- proper identification of pests;
- identification of the effects of biological control agents.
- Regular checking of a warehouse, bakery, restaurant,
field, greenhouse, golf course, or other areas and early detection
of pests can function together like an early warning system for
pests, helping to avoid or prevent a pest problem.
- Proper identification of pests is an extremely important
prerequisite to handling problems effectively. For example, the
brown banded and German cockroach can be easily confused with
each other. Identification is important because certain management
practices may control only one species and not the other. Correct
identification enables you to manage the real source of the problem
and avoid merely treating the symptoms (or controlling non-pests).
Some pests cause similar evidence. Unless the pest is identified,
the control program may have the wrong pest as its target. Identification
enables you to cure the pest problem and avoid injury to non-target
organisms, particularly if you:
- use a pesticide that is specific to the pest;
- control the pest effectively during the most susceptible
stage of its
- life cycle;
- consider the use of a non-chemical control.
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- Identifying the effects of biological control means
knowing which creatures are helpful and determining if pests
have been affected by the beneficial organisms. Sometimes pests
are kept in check naturally, and at other times the pest populations
increase sharply.
Assessment
Assessment is the process of determining the potential for
pest populations to reach an economic threshold or an intolerable
level. Is a grower likely to suffer financially? Is the pest likely
to transmit a disease? How can you tell? There are important differences
between the assessment of crop pests and urban pests.

- Forecasting can help you determine if weather conditions
will be favorable for the development of diseases and insect
pests. For example, by "plugging in" values (such as
the number of rainy days and the temperatures for those days),
growers can predict outbreaks and spray only when conditions
are favorable for diseases. Growers who have kept good records
of pests in previous years can use these records to help determine
if problems such as weeds, insects, and diseases will reoccur.
They might be able, for example, to apply the most effective
herbicides at the proper time for early control of a problem.
- Thresholds, or more specifically economic thresholds
, are levels that mark the highest point a pest population can
reach without risk of economic loss. Populations above these
thresholds can reach the economic injury level, where they cause
enough damage for the grower to lose money. At the economic injury
level, the cost of control is equal to the loss of yield or quality
that would result otherwise.

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Thresholds for many pests and crops have been scientifically
determined. The advantage of thresholds is that if a pest has
not reached threshold, there is no risk of economic loss. Therefore,
there is no need to spray. Once the pest density (number of pests
per unit area) has reached threshold, action is justified. The
costs of control will be less than equal to the estimated losses
that the pests would cause if left uncontrolled.
Urban pest thresholds are often related to aesthetics rather
than economic considerations. Where health concerns or individual
sensitivities exist, the tolerable level of the pest may be zero.
A zero threshold forces action, even if only one pest has been
detected. Zero thresholds exist in hospitals, food production,
warehousing, and retail facilities.
Action (Control Measures)
Once a pest has reached the economic threshold, or intolerable
level, action should be taken. In some situations, cultural controls
can destroy pests. One example is early harvesting to avoid pest
problems, which prevents crop loss and can sometimes be more economical
than a pesticide application.
Chemical pesticides are used as a control measure when no other
strategies will bring the pest population under the threshold.
In fact, the success of waiting until a pest reaches threshold
usually hinges on the availability of a pesticide that will bring
the pest populations down quickly.
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In summary, an IPM approach means that pest managers
use multiple tactics to prevent pest buildups, monitor pest populations,
assess the damage, and make informed management decisions, keeping
in mind that pesticides should be used judiciously.
Disclaimer: Please read
the pesticide label prior to use. The information contained at this web
site is not a substitute for a pesticide label. Trade names used herein
are for convenience only; no endorsement of products is intended, nor is
criticism of unnamed products implied. Most of this information is historical
in nature and may no longer be applicable.
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