Title: Integrated Pest Management
1 Integrated Pest Management Andrew
Lawson Professor of Entomology and Chair,
Department of Plant Sciences, California State
University, Fresno
2- What is IPM?
- ecosystem based strategy with focus on long-term
prevention of pest or their damage through a
combination of techniques, incl
- biological control
- habitat manipulation
- modification of cultural practices
- use of resistant varieties
- pesticides are used only after monitoring
indicates the need and with goal of removing only
target organism
- all control methods are done in a way to
minimize risks to human health, beneficials,
non-targets, and the environment.
3Pest Management Strategies Prevention methods
include planting disease free seed, resistant
varieties, plant or harvest dates unfavorable for
pest, removal of overwinter sites.
Suppression reduce existing populations to
tolerable levels. Methods include aug.
biocontrol, mowing or cultivating weeds,
pesticide sprays
Eradication aimed at totally eliminating the
pest from an area usually for newly introduced
exotic pest species eg Mediterranean fruit fly,
Asian gypsy moth in Orange Co, Light Brown Apple
Moth
4Types of Damage
- Direct damage where they feed on the part of
crop we use.
CA red scale
Codling moth
5Indirect damage where they feed on parts of the
plant we dont use eg root feeders, leaf
feeders reduces quality or potential yield
grape leaffolder, Desmia funeralis
6May also act as vectors of plant diseases eg
Pierces disease, vectored by GWSS
7And vector human diseases (malaria, West Nile
virus, yellow fever, dengue fever.)
8Insect and mite pests in California walnuts. KEY
PESTS codling moth These pests must be managed
in most orchards every navel orangeworm year or
economic damage will occur. Pesticide
treatments walnut husk fly for these pests often
cause outbreaks of secondary pests. SECONDARY
PESTS walnut aphid These pests are often well
controlled by natural dusky-veined
aphid enemies in orchards that do not receive
applications frosted scale of broadspectrum
insecticides. They become walnut scale problems
primarily when sprays applied to manage San Jose
scale key pests kill their natural
enemies. spider mites OCCASIONAL
PESTS Pacific flatheaded borers These pests may
cause problems in some orchards redhumped
caterpillars once every few years when
environmental conditions oystershell scale favor
their development. Italian pear scale
9Sources for additional information on pest of
California crops. http//www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/
10(No Transcript)
11http//www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PCA/pcainvert.html
12Additional resources
- IPM in Practice Principles and methods of
integrated pest management. Mary Louise Flint and
Patricia Gouveia Eds. University of California
Agriculture and Natural Resources. 2001. 296 pp. - Entomology and pest management, Larry P. Pedigo.
6th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ Prentice Hall,
c2008. 816 p. ill., maps 26 cm. - Introduction to insect pest management, edited by
Robert L. Metcalf, William H. Luckmann. 2nd ed.
New York Wiley, c1982. xiv, 577 p. ill. 24
cm - Natural Enemies Handbook The illustrated guide
to biological pest control. M. L. Flint and S.
H. Driestadt. University of California Division
of Agriculture and Natural Resources. 1998. 154
pp.
13Host Resistance
Resistant Plant Cultivars - those with inherited
characters that result in less pest damage or
infestation
Host resistance is one of the most effective and
least expensive management tools
14Examples
- Nematode resistance in many crops (beans, cotton,
potato, alfalfa, citrus, grape, walnut ) - Phyloxera resistance in grapes using resistance
rootstock - Spotted alfalfa aphid resistance in Lahontan
cultivars of alfalfa
15GMO Example
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a bacteria which
produces a protein crystal which acts as an
insecticidal toxin. The gene which codes for
this protein has been isolated and inserted into
a number of crops (corn, cotton, rice and potato
(discontinued))
The plant then expresses the Bt gene, producing
the protein and is toxic to the lepidopteran
pests feeding on it.
16Susceptible Cotton
Bt Cotton
17Modifying Insect Behavior
Pheromones are classified based on the type of
interaction mediated Eg alarm, aggregation, or
sex
- Main uses in IPM
- detection
- monitoring
- mating disruption
- mostly rely on sex pheromones
18Most sex pheromones are produced by the female
and used by the male for mate location.
wind
19The most common use is to attract insects to
traps for detection and monitoring
20Wing type pheromone trap used for OFM, PTB OBLR
etc
21A delta trap used for codling moth, pink
bollworm, gypsy moth, PTB
22Trapping taken to the obvious next step - male
annihilation place enough traps to catch enough
males so females have no mates. Used for pink
bollworms in Arizona with 5 traps per acre, but
hard to evaluate. Estimated that gt 95 would
have to be destroyed before population would be
limited. Un-trapped males just mate more
frequently.
23Mass trapping
- An aggregation pheromone may be used to attract
both sexes trap enough to reduce overall
population
24Mating Disruption two main approaches false
trail following and mating confusion.
- False Trail Following place out many more point
sources (low release rate) per acre than the
number of females - males essentially waste time by following dead
end trails
25- Mating Confusion place large doses of pheromone
in the field sufficient to hide the trail of
females - part of confusion comes from antennal receptors
become habituated and no longer respond to
pheromone - end result is insect becomes unable to orient to
any pheromone source
26Examples of pheromone use in IPM Pink Bollworm
(Lepidoptera Gelechiidae)
- major pest of cotton in southern California
deserts. - In the central valley CDFA has an ongoing project
to prevent establishment through sterile male
release and pheromone mating disruption
27damage
28- The pheromone is called gossyplure in commercial
formulations (7,11-hexadecadienyl acetate) - has been produced in aerially applied
formulations including hollow fibers, flakes, and
microcapsules - has also been produced in twist tie ropes and
twist-on spirals
29Cultural Practices refers to the management
techniques or options which may be manipulated to
achieve crop production goals
Cultural Control is manipulation of the
environment making it less favorable to pest
invasion, reproduction, survival or dispersal
Most often used as a preventative pest management
tool. Good cultural practices rely on good
understanding of crop and pest biology, ecology
and phenology
30Site Selection Select a site that is pest free
or select a crop or variety that is well suited
to the area. Plants poorly adapted to a site are
stressed and therefore more susceptible to
insects and disease
Avoid planting in fields with a history of weed,
nematode or disease problems or plant a crop
where these problems are more easily managed
31Sanitation Techniques
- Typically refers to efforts to maintain clean
fields and equipment to reduce spread of pests or
eliminate their habitat - Eg Use certified seed, tubers or rootstock to
prevent the spread of nematodes, weeds and
pathogens
32Eg. removal of mummy nuts from almond trees
eliminates overwintering sites for navel orange
worm
33- Eg 2 collection of dropped fruit reduces
populations of codling moth, apple maggot, and
plum curculio
34Destruction of Alternate Hosts
Destroying alternate hosts which pests use to
build up numbers on or require to complete
lifecycle
35Eg. Lettuce root aphid Pemphigus busarius
overwinters in galls on poplar trees Populations
have been reduced below damaging levels by
eliminating poplar windbreaks
36- Eg 2 destroy mustard hosts around cole crop
fields to help control cabbage aphid
Brassica spp
37Habitat Modification
Pest problems happen when conditions required for
survival by the pests are favorable. Habitat
modification intentionally limits one or more of
these requirements
Eg. Draining areas with standing water reduces
breeding sites for mosquitoes
38Planting and Harvest Dates
Plant or harvest on dates to avoid pests Eg.
Early harvest on costal avocados can help control
greenhouse thrips
39On cotton cotton plowdown program in San
Joaquin Valley dictates no cotton planted before
March 20. Avoids flight period of emerging
female pink bollworms in spring so they have no
hosts to lay eggs on
40Fertilizers and Soil Amendments Healthy plants
tend to have a greater resistance to pests, but
over fertilization may create more pests
Eg. Excess nitrogen on nectarines increases brown
rot, Oriental fruit moth (Gapholita molesta), and
Peach twig Borer (Anarsia eatella)
41Excess nitrogen on cotton tends to increase
cotton aphid, leafhoppers and cotton bollworm
42Mechanical and Physical Control
Mechanical and Physical controls include
practices that mechanically destroy pests or
present a physical barrier to their infestation
43Soil Tillage
Tillage or cultivation may kill weeds, disrupt
lifecycle of some pests, and bury disease
inoculum May also expose insects to desiccation
44Omnivorous leafroller (Platynota stultana)
overwinters in the larval stage in grape mummies,
vineyard weeds, and other trash in the vineyard
45larvae
Adult female
46The French plow is used in vineyards in early
spring before new growth begins to bury
overwintering larvae of the omnivorous leaf
roller.
47Soil Solarization has been effective in
controlling certain soilborne pathogens, many
weeds, and certain insects increases
temperature to lethal levels
A clear plastic tarp is placed over bare,
moistened soil for 3 6 weeks during the hottest
part of the year.
48Cold storage destroys apple maggot and plum
curculio in apples.
49Barriers may exclude pests eg.Tanglefoot band
on citrus to exclude ants
50Sterile Insect Technique
First developed for screwworm fly
(Calliphoridae), a parasite of cattle in Southern
US, Central and South America
51eggs are laid at the edge of a wound on a
warm-blooded animal. Larvae feed on the living
flesh.
larvae pupate in the ground. Emerge as adults
52Left untreated, screwworm-infested wounds lead to
death. Multiple infestations can kill a grown
steer in 5-7 days.
Female mate only once
53- In 1950s USDA developed sterile insect technique
- laboratory-raised flies sterilized by gamma rays
are spread by aircraft over infested areas. - As millions of sterile flies flood an area, the
sterile males mate with fertile female flies. - The resulting eggs do not hatch.
- First used operationally on Sanibel Island, Fl.
in 1957. By 1959, screwworms had been eradicated
from the Southeast
54In 1950s released 50 million/wk
In late 1970s released 500 million/wk
55Each tower has 70 trays with 25,000 flies/tray
(1.75 million/tower)
Program has expanded through Mexico Central
America
56Sterile male technique has also been used against
Medfly in CA, Pink Bollworm, and Light Brown
Apple moth (under development),
57Biological Control a cornerstone of IPM
There are three approaches or types of biological
control Classical Augmentation Conservation
Proper selection, timing, and application of
insecticides to reduce impact on natural enemies
58Pesticides in IPM
Pesticides are any substance or mixture of
substances intended for preventing, destroying,
repelling or mitigating any insects, rodents,
nematodes, fungi or weeds or any other forms of
life declared to be pests and any substance or
mixture of substances intended for use as a plant
regulator, defoliant or desiccant (FIFRA)
59- Selection and use is complicated
- many materials to choose from
- many formulations available
- must know pest ID, life stage, and beneficials
present - must consider how pesticide will react with
crop, non-targets, environment, worker safety etc
- must identify nearby locations and factors which
prohibit or limit use of certain pesticides. Eg
schools, parks, workplaces, lakes, streams etc - pesticide must be registered for use on
commodity and growth stage you are targeting - always check label for legal uses
60- Formulation
- There are many available formulations including
liquids, dusts, granulars and baits. - Must consider how formulation affects host
plant, people, nontargets and the environment
- pesticides formulated with oil tend to be more
phytotoxic. - Wettable powders have low phytotoxicity, but
inhaling dust during mixing is more of a health
risk - dry flowables have low phytotoxicity, and no
problem with dust, but abrasive to application
equipment. - longer residual may mean more control, but they
also are usually more destructive to natural
enemies, nontargets and the environment
61Mode of Action
When selecting a pesticide one must consider its
mode of action. Mode of action is the mechanism
by which the pesticide kills or controls the pest.
- most interfere with a metabolic process
- Eg. organophosphates interfere with central
nervous system (cholinesterase inhibitors). - Insect growth regulators interfere with action of
natural hormones - some cause physical damage
- Eg. desiccants remove waxy coating resulting in
water loss
62Mode of Action (contd)
- Classified into groups by Insecticide Resistance
Action Committee www.irac-online.org - Eg carbamates are 1A, OPs are 1B
- Identify 28 MoAs plus subtypes
63Persistence
Persistence is the amount of time it takes for a
pesticide to degrade in the environment, usually
measured in half life. May be affected by
formulation, soil microbes, UV light, pH of water
used in mixing.
If reinfestation if likely, persistence may be
desirable, but usually means increased risk to
people, wildlife, and beneficials Highly
persistent pesticides select for resistance faster
64Selectivity
- Selectivity is the range of organisms and life
stages of organisms affected by the pesticide. - Broad spectrum vs Selective
- Selective - generally desirable in IPM programs
because they have less impact on NEs and other
nontargets (including humans) - they target chemical processes unique to one
pest or group
65Selectivity (contd)
- Selectivity can also be obtained by application
techniques eg bark banding for elm leaf beetle - Systemic insecticides
66Pesticide Toxicity
Toxicity is the capacity of a material to cause
injury to organisms - All pesticides are toxic to
some organisms Each pesticide has a toxicity
rating that suggests the relative hazard to
people and other organisms in the environment
67Toxicity Categories
- Insecticide categories give an idea of their
potential hazard (by LD50) - Category I highly toxic signal words
Danger-Poison. Oral LD50 ? 50mg/kg. - Category II moderately toxic signal word
Warning. 50mg/kg ? Oral LD50 ?500mg/kg. - Category III slightly toxic signal word
Caution. 500mg/kg ? Oral LD50 ?5,000mg/kg. - Category IV low toxicity signal word Caution.
5,000mg/kg ? Oral LD50
68Insecticide Nomenclature
- Insecticides are designated by three names
- Common name selected by Entomological Society
of America - Trade name (also proprietary name or brand name)
chosen by the manufacturer - Chemical name dictated by rules for
nomenclature of organic chemistry - Eg. Common name carbaryl
- trade name Sevin
- chemical name 1-naphthalenyl methylcarbamate
69Grouping by Compounds
- The most precise way to classify insecticides is
by their chemical makeup - Organophosphates - discovery was associated with
German work on nerve gases (including sarin)
derived from phosphoric acid - These work by poisoning the nervous system
inhibit acetylcholinesterase - Examples Malathion, parathion, diazanon,
chlorpyrifos
70Grouping by Compounds
- Carbamates - developed in 1950s by Geigy Corp.
produced from carbamic acid - These also work by poisoning the nervous system -
inhibit acetylcholinesterase - Examples Carbaryl, Carbofuran, Aldicarb Methomyl
71From Zalom et al 2005
72Grouping by Compounds
- Organochlorines (chlorinated hydrocarbons)
- Few are currently registered for use in the US -
mostly removed from market due to persistence and
negative impacts on wildlife (bioaccumulation) - These also work as nerve poisons various
generally alter ion in axon - Examples Includes DDT, Chlordane, aldrin,
dieldrin, endrin, mirex and toxaphen all no
longer available - Endosulfan and lindane still registered
73Grouping by Compounds
- Pyrethroids synthetic compounds based on
pyrethrum a material produced by Chrysanthemum
sp. - New materials in this class emerged in the 80s
and early 90s (3rd gen and 4th gen) - These also work as nerve poisons bind to sites
on Na channel - Examples resmethrin, permethrin, esfenvalerate
74Grouping by Compounds
- Neonicotinoids (or chloronicotinyls) - a new
class of synthetics which resemble nicotine - Imidacloporid (Gaucho, Merit, Admire,
Confidor, Provado.), Acetamiprid (Assail),
thiacloprid (Calypso), Thiamethoxam (Platinum,
Actara) - Affects central nervous system - nicotinic
acetylcholine receptor agonist.
75From Zalom et al 2005
76From Zalom et al 2005
77Grouping by Compounds
- Fumigants contain one or more of the halogen
gases (Cl, Br or F) - Commonly used for structural pest control and for
stored product pests in grain elevators, packaged
beans, grains, etc - Examples para-dichlorobenzene napthalene
(mothballs), methyl bromide (phased out in 2005
due to ozone depletion current CUE)
78Other Insecticides
- Botanicals not really a chemical grouping, but
include all insecticides derived from plants
the chemicals themselves are diverse - pyrethrum is an example produced by Chrysanthemum
sp. - Azadiractins are extracted from seeds of the neem
tree deter feeding and oviposition, also
interfere with growth and development very safe
for mammals - Nicotine is extracted from tobacco the most
dangerous of the botanicals
79Other Insecticides
- Insect Growth Regulators (IGRs) mimic natural
hormones and interfere with molting,
metamorphosis, reproduction, or formation of
exoskeleton - A very quickly growing group
- Chemically very diverse potentially very
selective - Examples hydropene (cockroaches), methoprene
(fleas, leps, beetles), diflubenzuron (
caterpillars, beetles, flies), lufeneron
(Program - fleas), hexaflumuron (Sentricon)
80Other Insecticides
- Microbials - Produced from microorganisms that
cause disease in insects - Another quickly growing group with promise
- Includes Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis), abamectin
and spinosad (both natural fermentation products
of bacteria)
81Other Insecticides
- Insecticidal Oils oils work by coating insects
and suffocating them - Oil is also phytotoxic, the higher the viscosity
the higher the phytotoxicity - Light (less viscous) oil may be used in the
summer called summer oils volatilize more
quickly - Heavy (more viscous) oil may only be used in the
dormant period called dormant oils
82Other Insecticides
- Insecticidal Soaps comprised of potassium salts
of fatty acids - Work by removing protective wax on insect cuticle
and may affect nervous system - Effective against aphids, whiteflies, mealybugs
and spider mites - Examples Safer soap, M-pede