Title: Pest Management for Master Gardeners
1Pest Management forMaster Gardeners
- Jim Jasinski IPM Program
- Ohio State University Extension
2Integrated Pest IPM Management
- Combines the best control tactics to reduce
reliance on pesticides, minimize environmental
effects, and keep pests at an acceptable level - Does not rely on any one tactic more than others
- Exhaust other options before pesticide use
3Integrated Pest IPM Management
- Not a pesticide free system
- Pesticides should be used at appropriate times
- Not the same as Organic
- Restrictions on synthetic pesticides and
fertilizers
4Integrated Pest IPM Management
- What is a pest?
- Some organism, weed, insect, animal, disease,
etc., growing or living in a place we dont want
it to be. - Pest or not?
- Ladybugs
- Dandelions
- Corn smut
5INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT Control Categories
PESTICIDES
MONITOR
BIOLOGICAL
CULTURAL
6Integrated Pest Management
Use of a variety of tactics to control pests
below an acceptable level
1. Cultural control Those tactics that you can
implement to reduce pest pressure 2. Biological
control - The benefit of other animals, insects,
arthropods, diseases in controlling pests 3.
Chemical control The use of pesticides
(insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides) to
control a pest
7Control Methods - Cultural
- Plant Tolerance / Resistance
- -Natural ability of plants to fight off or
withstand insect feeding, disease, virus, adverse
weather conditions, etc. - -Available for nearly all plant material
8Control Methods - Cultural
- Rotation
- -Move plant materials around.
- Break up Disease Insect life cycles
- Know the family of plants, i.e., tomatoes,
potatoes, egg plant - all the same family -
rotate away from the whole family
9Control Methods - Cultural
- Sanitation
- Remove excess plant material (to a compost pile?)
- Incorporate remaining plant material into soil to
accelerate breakdown - Amend soil as needed
10Control Methods - Cultural
- Mechanical
- Brick (somewhat messy), Hand Picking (icky),
Glove, Hosing - Somewhat effective, can be time consuming, need
to be repeated
11Control Methods - Cultural
- Exclusion
- Row Covers, Plastic Collars, Coffee Tins, Milk
Jugs, Netting - Prevents insects from cutting or eating plant
material - Remember to remove!!!
- Bee-ware of Bees Duties!!
12Control Methods - Cultural
13Control Methods - Cultural
- Traps in general
- Work 24/7
- Good early warning system for some insects
- Sticky Traps
- Used mainly for monitoring
- Traps males and females
- Traps beneficial and pest insects
14 Control Methods - Cultural
- Pheromone Traps in general
- Work 24/7
- Good early warning system for
- some insects
- Pheromone Trapping
- Pheromone Sex Attractants
- Used mainly for monitoring
- Traps only the males of a
- specific species
15 Control Methods - Cultural
- Traps in general
- Work 24/7
- Good early warning system for some insects
- Combo Traps
- Use Pheromones Scent
- Catch males and females
- Potentially draws more insects
- to a crop than it traps
- Successful???
Gemplers 2000 catalog
16 Control Methods - Biological
- Conservation
- Minimize disturbances to the area, attain natural
balance - Use softer or targeted insecticides if
possible - Recognize the role of Ground Beetles, Spiders,
Virus, Fungi, etc. - Encourage
- Plant nectar pollen source flowers to attract
insects - Augment- add insect wild life
- - Ladybugs, Lacewings, Praying Mantids, Parasitic
Wasps, etc. - - Immediate effectiveness???
17Ladybugs
Iowa State University
18Ladybugs
19Green lacewings
Iowa State University / Minnesota Dept. of
Agriculture
20Praying mantids
21Ground beetles
Iowa State University
Midwest Vegetable Insect Man.
22Parasitic WaspsAttack eggs larvae
NCR pub 471
NCR pub 471
23Parasitic WaspsAttack larvae
NCR pub 471
24Parasitic WaspsAttack pupae
NCR pub 471
25Parasitic WaspsAttack aphids
NCR pub 471
26Parasitic FliesAttack eggs larvae
NCR pub 471
NCR pub 471
27Spiders
Audobons Insects Spiders
28Fungi, Bacteria, Viruses
NCR pub 471
Midwest Insect Vegetable Management
29Nematodes
- Different kinds
- Entomopathogenic, plant parasitic, free living
30Control Methods -Chemical
- N Soaps-K salt of fatty acids
- N Oils-Dormant
- Botanicals-Rotenone, Neem, Pyrethrums, Sabadilla
- N Microbials-Bt, Milky spore
- Pyrethroids-Permethrin, Resmethrin,
Esfenvalerate - Neonicitinoids Admire, Thiamethoxam
Acetamiprid, Clothianidin - Macrocyclic lactones -Spinosid,
Emamectin,Benzoate, Abemectin, Mibemectin - IGR - Buprofezin, Azadirachtin, Cyromazine,
Novaluron, Pyriproxifen Tebufenozide,
Methoxyfenozide - OCs-Methoxychlor
- OPs-Diazinon, Orthene, Malathion
- Carbamates-Sevin
31Pesticide Update
- Dursban (Chlorpyrifos)
- Most homeowner uses, indoor outdoor have been
cancelled - Sale to retailers stopped Feb 1, 2001
- Sale to consumers stopped Dec. 31, 2001
32Pesticide Update
- Diazinon
- All homeowner outdoor uses indoor uses will be
cancelled - Indoor uses
- Sale to consumers stopped Dec. 31, 2002
- Outdoor uses
- Sale to retailers stopped Aug 31, 2003
- Sale to consumers stopped Dec. 31, 2004
33Pesticide Update
- Methoxychlor
- All homeowner uses suspended
- January 14, 2000
- Broad spectrum fruit and vegetable insecticide
- Lindane-homeowner uses cancelled???
- Kelthane-homeowner uses cancelled???
34What should we recommend?
- There are no major health or safety concerns
about using up existing product (though
anti-pesticide groups are stating otherwise). - Caution against purchasing and hording Dursban or
Diazinon products. Both have good shelf life,
but further restrictions may result in costly
disposal problems. - Many companies substituting permethrin for the
active ingredient but not changing the brand
name, many cases lower efficacy.
35Ohioline fact sheet Striped cucumber beetle
36Ohioline Fact Sheet Striped cucumber beetle
- Recommended chemicals include rotenone,
methoxychlor, malathion and carbaryl applied
according to label directions and safety
precautions.
This publication contains pesticide
recommendations that are subject to change at any
time. These recommendations are provided only as
a guide. It is always the pesticide applicator's
responsibility, by law, to read and follow all
current label directions for the specific
pesticide being used. Due to constantly changing
labels and product registration, some of the
recommendations given in this writing may no
longer be legal by the time you read them. If any
information in these recommendations disagrees
with the label, the recommendation must be
disregarded. No endorsement is intended for
products mentioned, nor is criticism meant for
products not mentioned. The author, The Ohio
State University and Ohio State University
Extension assume no liability resulting from the
use of these recommendations.
37Garden Center SurveyOrganic Pesticides
- Bts, Rotenone, Neem oil, Sulfur Chewing insects
- Pyrethrin Permethrin, Pyrethrin PBO flying
insects - Paraffinic oil, Volck oil, Sulfur early season
plant protection from mites - Diatomaceous Earth, Orthoboric acid crawling
insects / pests - K fatty acid soaps Aphids, mites
- Capsaicin, Eugenol repellents?
- Limonene pet pests
38Garden Center SurveySynthethic Pesticides
- Allethrin PBO, Resmethrin, Tetramethrin,
Permethrin, Tralomethrin, Esfenvalerate,
Cyfluthrin, Bifenthrin (Pyrethroids) Broad
spectrum, flying insects, chewing insects - Metaldehyde slug bait
- Carbaryl broad spectrum, chewing
- Acephate, Cygon, Disulfoton, Imidacloprid
systemic, broad spectrum, sucking and chewing
insects - Diazinon, Malathion broad spectrum, chewing and
sucking insects
39 Control Methods - Chemical
- Attempt softer solutions 1st
- Oils, Soaps, Bts
- Narrow vs. Broad spectrum
- Rotate insecticide classes
- Prolongs the onset of resistance
- Not just Brand name Bug Killer X
- Pay attention to Active Ingredient
40INSECTICIDE RESISTANCEHow Does it Occur?
STEP ONE Mixed population to start
with Repeated spraying, lack of insecticide
rotation Huge reproductive capacity short life
cycle
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41INSECTICIDE RESISTANCEHow Does it Occur?
STEP TWO susceptible individuals are killed.
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42INSECTICIDE RESISTANCEHow Does it Occur?
STEP THREE resistant individuals reproduce
giving rise to a resistant strain within the
species.
R
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43INSECT MANAGEMENTIPM Approach
CHEMICAL
BIOLOGICAL
CULTURAL
Threshold
44Integrated Pest Management IPM
- Based on Information
- -Monitoring
- Identification
- -Thresholds
- Action Plan
- -Evaluation
45Monitoring
46Monitoring
- Where do you look?
- Under, on, and in leaves
- On and in stems
- On and in fruit
- On and in the soil, etc.
- When do you look?
- Morning
- Afternoon
- Evening
- Night
47Monitoring
- How often do you look?
- Hourly
- Daily
- Every few days
- Weekly
- Biweekly
- Establish a routine.
- What is your level of commitment?
48Identification
- Most insects are benign or beneficial...
- Recognize pests
49Thresholds
- Amount of damage that can be sustained before
some action is taken. - Economic based on large scale production, where
profit or loss from crop value and input costs
can be calculated - Example gt12 grubs / sq. foot on turf, more than
1 ECB per corn plant, gt 3 stand loss, etc.
50Economic Thresholds
Yield 200 bushels, Price 2 /
bushel Insecticide treatment 16
_10 _8 _6 _4 _2 _0
Insect population
Damage
Time
51Thresholds
- Amount of damage that can be sustained before
some action is taken - Aesthetic subjectively prefer not to have that
much damage on plant, no economic justification
per se - Example 1 hornworm on a tomato plant, a few
caterpillars feeding on tree, some aphids on a
rose, etc.
52TREEAGEA Plant Health Care Concept
- Three Plant Problem Categories
- GROUP 1 plant will survive and thrive without
intervention efforts. - GROUP 2 plant will not thrive or survive with
the application of the best available
intervention efforts. - GROUP 3 plant can survive and thrive if
intervention efforts are focused on increasing
plant health through pest and disease management
practices.
53TREEAGEA Plant Health Care Concept
- GROUP 1 plant will survive and thrive without
intervention efforts. - Example Nipple galls on Oak leaves
54TREEAGEA Plant Health Care Concept
- GROUP 2 plant will not thrive or survive with
the application of the best available
intervention efforts. - Example Cutworms that have attacked a seedling
tomato or pepper plant
55TREEAGEA Plant Health Care Concept
- GROUP 3 plant can survive and thrive if
intervention efforts are focused on increasing
plant health through pest and disease management
practices. - Example Gypsy moth larvae feeding on Oak tree
leaves
56 Evaluation
- How well did the actions you took work?
- Are you satisfied with the result?
- Re-use the tactic, modify the tactic, or change
the tactic?