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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

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.

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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.

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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)

  1. Monitoring pests involves:
  2. regular checking of the area;
  3. early detection of pests;
  4. proper identification of pests;
  5. identification of the effects of biological control agents.
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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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.

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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.


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