Title: Horticulture%20Science%20Lesson%2031%20Understanding%20Integrated%20Pest%20Management
1Horticulture Science Lesson 31Understanding
Integrated Pest Management
2What is integrated pest management?
- Integrated pest management (IPM) is a pest
management strategy that uses a combination of
best management practices (BMP) to reduce pest
damage with the least disruption to the
environment. - Best management practices (BMPs) are those
practices that combine scientific research with
practical knowledge to optimize production and
increase crop quality while maintaining
environmental integrity.
3What is integrated pest management?
- IPM provides protection against hazards to
humans, domestic animals, plants, and the
environment. - Studies have shown that no single control measure
works consistently over a long period of time. - A reason for this is that pests can develop
resistance to certain control measures.
4What is integrated pest management?
- The goal of IPM is to keep pest populations below
the economic or aesthetic injury level. - 1. Economic injury level is the point at which
the cost of pest control equals the revenue loss
caused by a pest. - It is determined by estimating the potential
yield loss, the value of the crop, and the cost
of treatment. - Economic injury level also clearly defines how
much damage can be tolerated.
5What is integrated pest management?
- 2. Economic threshold is the number of insects
per plant or the amount of damage to the plant
that economically justifies the use of control
measures. - If a control is applied when a pest population
reaches the economic threshold, the population
will be suppressed before it reaches the economic
injury level.
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7What is integrated pest management?
- The key to a successful IPM program is scouting,
which involves regularly monitoring pest
populations and crop conditions. - A scout collects data about which pests are
causing damage, what stage of life each pest is
in, and whether the pest population is increasing
or decreasing.
8What is integrated pest management?
- The weakest link in each pests biology must be
found if management of the pest is to be
successful.
9What is integrated pest management?
- Benefits of IPM help sustain the ability of the
earth to meet the needs of an increasing human
population. - 1. The benefits to horticulture vary with the
crop and the extent to which pests interfere with
economical production. - Careful planning is required to make effective
use of IPM.
10What is integrated pest management?
- The benefits of IPM to the horticulture industry
- a. There are reduced pesticide costs in
addition to fewer pesticides used with IPM. - b. Application costs are reduced due to time,
and the cost of labor for pesticide application
is reduced. - c. Less pesticide resistance develops within
populations of insects, weeds, and diseases.
11What is integrated pest management?
- 2. IPM also benefits the environment, which is
made more sustainable and friendly to people. - Benefits of IPM to the environment
- a. Reduced contamination and degradation of the
environment occurs through the use of IPM. - Pesticide residues do not build up in soil,
water, and other natural resources. - b. Cancer-causing residues are present in
smaller amounts or are not on food at all. - Less pesticide residue on food products means a
decreased chance of people ingesting pesticides.
12How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- An understanding of the major pest groups and
their biology is required to ensure success in
reducing crop losses due to pests. - A pest is a living organism that can cause injury
or loss to a plant.
- Pests include insects, diseases, weeds, mites,
nematodes parasites, and animals.
13How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- Insects are a group of animals with an
exoskeleton and three body parts. - Most insects have six legs and four wings.
- More than 800,000 kinds of insects have been
identified. - Insects are capable of producing large numbers of
offspring in a short time and can cause
economical loss by feeding on horticultural
crops.
14How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 1. Insects have either chewing or sucking
mouthparts. - Damage symptoms caused by chewing insects are
leaf defoliation, leaf mining, stem boring, and
root feeding. - Insects with sucking mouthparts produce distorted
plant growth, leaf stippling, and leaf burn.
15How are the types of pests identified and
described?
16How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- A plant disease is defined as a disturbance to
the normal growth and development of a plant. - Diseases are generally classified as being
infectious or noninfectious. - Infectious diseases are caused by living
organisms such as bacteria, fungi, or virus,
which are often referred to as disease pathogens.
- An infectious disease can be spread to other
plants.
17How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- Noninfectious diseases are caused by
environmental imbalances and cannot be spread to
other plants. - Noninfectious disease examples include over
watering, nutrient deficiencies, and air
pollution damage. - Plants are most susceptible to disease when they
are under some type of stress. - The stress is usually associated with
environmental factors.
18How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 1. The occurrence and severity of infectious
plant diseases is based on three factors. - A susceptible plant or host must be present.
- The causal agent or organism that produces a
disease must be present. - Environmental conditions conducive to the causal
agent must occur. - The relationship of these three factors is known
as the disease triangle. - Disease control programs are designed to affect
each or all of these factors.
19How are the types of pests identified and
described?
20How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 2. Fungi are a principal cause of plant disease.
- Fungi are organisms that lack chlorophyll.
- They absorb nutrients from living or dead
organisms. - Their bodies consist of threadlike vegetative
structures known as hyphae. - When hyphae are grouped together, they are called
mycelium. - Fungi can reproduce and cause disease by
producing spores or mycelia. - The fungus can produce spores asexually or
sexually.
21How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 3. Bacteria are one-celled or unicellular
microscopic organisms. - Bacteria can enter a plant only through wounds or
natural openings.
22How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 4. Viruses are composed of nucleic acids
surrounded by protein sheaths. - They are capable of altering a plants metabolism
by affecting protein synthesis. - Plant viruses are transmitted by seeds, insects,
nematodes, fungi, and mechanical means. - Viral diseases produce several symptoms including
ring spots, stunting, malformations, and mosaics.
- A mosaic symptom is a leaf pattern of light and
dark green color.
23How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- Weeds are plants that are undesirable and are
often considered out of place. - Weeds compete for space, nutrients, water, and
light that the crop plants need to grow. - They also harbor insect pests.
- Weed life cycles are annuals, biennials, and
perennials. - They are also classified as broadleaf or grass
weeds.
1. An annual weed is a plant that completes its
life cycle within one growing season.
24How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 2. A biennial weed is a plant that will live for
two growing seasons. - Vegetative growth occurs in the first year where
the plant produces leaf, stems, and root tissue. - During the second year, the plant flowers and
produces seeds. - 3. A perennial weed can live for more than two
growing seasons and may reproduce by seed and/or
vegetative growth.
25How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 4. Broadleaf weeds have a broad leaf associated
with dicot plants. - Examples are dandelions, ground ivy, plantain,
and spurge. - 5. Grass weeds include monocots such as
crabgrass, nimblewill, and quackgrass.
26How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- Plants suffer from a variety of other pests
including mites, nematodes, parasitic plants, and
animals. - 1. Mites are small organisms with an
exoskeleton, two body parts, and eight legs. - 2. Nematodes are tiny hair-like roundworms that
feed on the root of plants. - They may live in the soil or water, within
insects, or as parasites of plants or animal
- Nematodes are quite small and produce damage to
plants by feeding on roots, stems, or leaf tissue.
27How are the types of pests identified and
described?
- 3. Some plants, such as dodder and mistletoe,
are parasitic. - Parasitic plants extract water and nutrients from
other plants and give nothing in return. - 4. Animals including deer, mice, rabbits, and
voles cause severe physical damage to plants,
which often causes plant death.
28What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- For successful management of pests, the IPM
program must be a year-round program. - Also, IPM control measures for a specific crop,
poinsettias for example, should begin before the
plants enter the greenhouse. - The strength of IPM is the combination of control
measures used. - Four broad areas of control include sanitation,
cultural/physical control, biological control,
and chemical control.
29What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- Many pest problems can be greatly reduced, if not
eliminated, with sanitation. - Sanitation is simply the effort made to keep a
greenhouse or garden clean. - Many insects and diseases can be found in plant
debris. - Sanitation involves the removal of weeds from the
immediate area around crops.
30What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- Cultural/physical control methods are those
methods that physically prevent activities of
pests. - Used alone they probably will not provide
complete control of pests and reduce certain
problems. - Cultural/physical controls are also safe to
humans and relatively easy to implement. - 1. Stop the introduction of pests to the
greenhouse when possible. - 2. Remove and destroy heavily infested and
diseased plants.
31What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- 3. Maintain optimal cultural requirements for
each crop (growing medium, watering, fertility,
temperatures, etc.) to promote healthy growth. - 4. Fungal diseases can be reduced by providing
good air circulation around the plants.
5. The yellow sticky traps used as monitoring
tools also serve as a means of physical control.
32What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- Biological controls involve the use of living
organisms to control pests. - They maybe microbial organisms, parasitic
organisms, or predators. - Biological control organisms for greenhouse use
are found in nature and are considered
environmentally safe. - 1. A bacterium, Bacillus thurengiensis,
effectively controls caterpillars. - Aphids and whitefly can be controlled to an
extent by species of bacteria and fungi. - The bacteria and fungi are natural diseases of
those insects.
33What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- 2. Parasitic organisms help to control some
pests. - The parasites are natural enemies of the pest and
live off the pest organism. - An example is a tiny parasitic wasp that lays its
eggs on the whitefly larva that feeds on plant
leaves. - The eggs hatch with the wasp larva inside the
whitefly larva. - The wasp larva proceeds to eat the whitefly
larva. - The wasp matures, emerges from what is left of
the whitefly, mates, and looks for whitefly larva
on which to lie the next generation of eggs.
34What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- 3. Predatory organisms can be released to devour
certain plant pests. - A beetle attacks whitefly larva and adults.
- A mite is used to control thrips.
- Ladybugs eat aphids.
- As with parasitic organisms, chemical pesticides
should not be used with predatory organisms. - Also, predatory and parasitic organisms should be
released when pest populations are small.
35What are the basic elements of an integrated pest
management program?
- The use of chemicals to control pests and
diseases is chemical control. - The chemicals used are called pesticides.
- Although once used almost exclusively, control of
pests with the use of pesticides is now viewed as
only one component of an IPM program. - In fact, use of chemical pesticides is now often
done only when absolutely necessary. - Application of pesticides must be done safely to
reduce potential injury to people and the
environment.