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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Welcome! This course is designed for pest management professionals, municipal and county employees, city managers and others wanting to know more about Integrated Pest Management. After this course, you will be able to: Understand basic IPM practices Implement, manage and oversee an IPM program Explain IPM practices to the public Please refer to the Handouts button for additional resources.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management What is Integrated Pest Management (IPM)? IPM is the best pest control with the least environmental impact. IPM is a proven pest control method that provides long term management, not just a temporary fix. IPM reduces pesticide exposure to children while safely controlling pests. IPM can reduce pest complaints by as much as 93%.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM uses a combination of approaches to achieve maximum results when used together: – Prevention – Monitoring – Identification – Maintenance – Recordkeeping – Clean-building practices IPM Practices
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM varies by context Agricultural, Lawn & Garden Practiced in landscapes, gardens, farm & ranch land. Focus is on outdoor pests that diminish the beauty or productivity of landscapes, crops & livestock. Structural IPM Practiced in and around structures, homes & buildings. Focus is on indoor pests that present problems for people, pets and the structures themselves.
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IPM Control Strategies Agriculture, Lawn & GardenStructural Biological Control Cultural Control (mechanical) Cultural Control (physical) Chemical Control Plant/Host Defenses Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM control strategies different in context There are fewer IPM control strategies for structural applications. You will begin to understand why as we explore IPM control measures further.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM practices different in each context Why do some specialists think that biological control is not necessary in an urban structural setting? Would YOU release parasitic wasps into an apartment building downtown to control a roach infestation? That might be scary for residents, and it would be impractical. You’re right, but if a garden had an outbreak of aphids, you would certainly want to release ladybug larvae to help you control the aphids.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM Strategy Tree
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management We Will Focus On
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management More on Biological Control
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Foundations of Biological Control: Two Main Tactics Cause pest’s natural enemies to thrive Make environment less suitable for pest In both situations, the result is the same: Pest populations decline
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Classical Biological Control Releasing the natural ENEMIES from the same region as the pest. Hope the population of the natural enemy establishes in the environment to achieve long term control. Read about effectively controlling Saltcedar with the Saltcedar Leaf beetle in the Texas Panhandle here.effectively controlling Saltcedar with the Saltcedar Leaf beetle in the Texas Panhandle here
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Many vectors used for biological control Predators Parasitoids Pathogens Bacteria Viruses Fungi Nematodes
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Biological Control: Augmentation Introduces a natural enemy without the hopes of the population establishing in the environment. Inoculation – Releasing natural enemies before pest is established. Inundation – Flooding the area with multiple releases of a natural enemy after pest is established. Read about how Trichogramma wasps can successfully control cotton pests using augmentation.Trichogramma wasps can successfully control cotton pests using augmentation
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Conservation Biological Control Protection and encouragement of existing populations of natural pest enemies. Selecting less toxic products will promote populations of beneficial insects. Do not confuse this with cultural control Read more about biological controlRead more about biological control.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Cultural Control Manipulating the surroundings or environment to be less suitable for the PEST population. Keeping pests away from sources of food, water and shelter are the best way to avoid pest problems.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Physical Cultural Control Keeping pests out and away (sealing holes, screens, sanitation) Sanitation is an effective method of cultural control. Read about controlling houseflies with cultural control methods.controlling houseflies with cultural control methods
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Mechanical Cultural Control Non-chemical trapping methods and tactics that directly affect the pest population (tillage, fire, sticky traps) The right traps can provide effective control in buildings and homes. Read about mechanical control in gardens.mechanical control in gardens Read about mechanical control in landscapes.mechanical control in landscapes
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Chemical Control - Last Resort Should be the least utilized form of control. Handle pest problems using biological or cultural control first. Chemicals should be applied in the least lethal dosage.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Chemical Control - History Chemical era (1939-1962) DDT (Insecticidal action discovered in 1939) – Heavily used in the United States for agricultural purposes as an insecticide – Banned from usage in the United States in 1972 Insecticides are an 8 million dollar industry – Many chemicals are applied without proper knowledge of application protocol
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Chemicals have Consequences Resistance – herbicide and pesticide resistance reported Secondary Pests – chemicals can upset natural ecological balance Killing Natural Enemies – IPM promotes natural predator-prey relationships to keep pests at bay Human Health (teratogenic, mutagenic, carcinogenic) Environmental Factors – runoff upsets downstream ecology
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Minimize Chemical Exposure 3 million workers are poisoned each year by chemical exposure 20,000 deaths occur each year Read about risks associated with chemical exposure.risks associated with chemical exposure
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management So, I have a pest problem. What do I do? Identification: You need to know what pest you are dealing with. Key things such as: – Morphology – Lifespan – Food Sources – Habitat
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Why Identify? It is crucial that we take steps to reduce chemical usage and exposure. This is why IPM practices have been implemented for decades now. Depending on the type of insect, chemical options may be a waste of time and money! Choose a specific treatment for the behavior, life cycle and location of your specific pest to get the best results.
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Why not use chemicals? For example: Some pesticides are useless against pests that have piercing/sucking mouthparts They will only kill the insect if the chemical directly touches the body.
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Pesticide application rules Safe use of pesticides involves several checkpoints: Post notice in areas where pesticides will be applied Heed re-entry periods Use only licensed applicators Mixing should occur outside occupied areas Non-pesticide measures need no posting Manage pesticide drift Heed rules relating to pesticide categories Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management IPM works by a series of steps: Pesticides Biological controls Physical / Mechanical controls Pest prevention & Sanitation
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First line of defense: Prevent & clean up Pest prevention & sanitation are the two primary building blocks of an IPM program. Clean the area thoroughly. Get rid of clutter. Eliminate messy storage, cardboard boxes and needless stacks of paper. Investigate alternate records retention methods to reduce paper storage. Sanitation can dramatically reduce pest claims. Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management
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Second line of defense: Physical & Mechanical Physical controls involve sealing pest entrances. Examples of mechanical controls include traps and fences for gardens. Observe where pests come and go. Caulk or seal openings where pests enter. Strategically place traps. Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management
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Third line of defense: Biological controls As we have discussed, Biological controls mean you are using one creature to control another creature. Understand relationships between predator and prey Take advantage of beneficial insects Realize that pesticides kill both beneficial and harmful insects equally. Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management
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Final line of defense: Pesticide Use Judicious use of pesticides is sometimes warranted after all other measures have been unsuccessful. Use the least toxic pesticide that will get the best results for the target pest. Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management
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Integrated Pest Management 101 Home Work IPM School Pest Management Types of IPM Applications Pest Prevention Communication IPM Process Common sense sanitation and maintenance steps minimize food, water and shelter pests need to thrive. Everyone plays a role in IPM – they must know how to do their part. Minimizes pest management risks
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IPM Basics Home Work IPM School Pest Management Quiz and Certificate Please complete the quiz and print your certificate of completion. Please complete a course evaluation at this link. Your feedback will be used to improve the course for future learners!
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