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Insect Management for the Organic Producer
Eric J. Rebek Associate Professor and State Extension Specialist Department of Entomology & Plant Pathology Oklahoma State University @EricRebek
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Organic Options for Pest Management
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Strategies Cultural control Biological control Physical/Mechanical control Regulatory (legal) control Chemical control (OMRI approved)
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1. Cultural Control Prevention: avoiding pest problems by modifying growing practices Crop rotation to break pest cycle Insect (and disease) resistance/tolerance Polyculture Trap crops Sanitation
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Crop Rotation YEAR 1 YEAR 2
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Crop Rotation Corn rootworm (Diabrotica spp.) – eggs in soil
Avoid corn following corn Note: Populations of Western corn rootworm and northern corn rootworms have adapted to corn-soybean rotations Wireworms – larvae in soil Avoid highly susceptible crops (e.g., root crops, corn, melons) following grassy sod or small grains Note: some species remain as larvae for 3-6 years
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Crop Rotation White grubs (Phyllophaga spp.) – larvae in soil
Avoid corn, potatoes, strawberries following grassy sod Note: some species remain as larvae for 2-3 years Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) – adults in soil Avoid repeated plantings of tomatoes, potatoes, or eggplant Note: great distances and barriers to movement may be needed for adequate control
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Insect Resistance/Tolerance
Insect-resistant crop varieties Bt corn Transgenic resistance to caterpillars (e.g., corn earworm) Glandular-haired alfalfa “Hairy” stems of certain alfalfa varieties inhibit potato leafhopper
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Polyculture Intercropping, cover crops, etc. Crop diversification can:
Reduce attractiveness of crops to pests that specialize on certain crops Plant Apparency Hypothesis Increase abundance and diversity of natural enemies that feed on pests Natural Enemies Hypothesis
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Trap Crops Non-crop plants more attractive to pests than cash crop
Interplanted within crop or around perimeter of crop
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Trap Crops Sorghum and sunflower – leaf-footed bugs in southern tomatoes Mustard – harlequin bugs in collards and other cole crops
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Trap Crops Wide variety of species – stink bugs in many cash crops
Hubbard squashes – cucumber beetle in cash crop squashes
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Sanitation Crop debris serves as harborage for pest insects
Remove and destroy debris Burial, soil incorporation
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Predators, Parasites, Pathogens
2. Biological Control The 3 P’s: Predators, Parasites, Pathogens
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P R E D A T O R S
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Predators Predators: larger than their prey, eat many prey, fast moving, generalist eaters
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Where is the predator? (bigger, fewer)
Lady beetle adult feeding on aphids… White exoskeletons of aphids can be called aphid ghosts. Tell tale signs that the beetle is a predator. One beetle many aphids Aphid in its mouth. What do laby beetles eat? Both adults and larvae eat aphids, scale insects, mealy bugs, mites, and insect eggs.
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Tulsa County Master Gardeners
Which is the predator? The big spider is eating the fly… (bigger= predator) Spiders are helpful, they eat flies---- and anything else that comes into their field of vision. Oklahoma State University Tulsa County Master Gardeners
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P A R A S I T O I D S
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Parasites (Parasitoids)
Parasitoids: smaller than prey, kill only one host, larvae are sedentary, many are specialists Parasitic wasps Parasitic flies
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This tomato hornworm has not been spit upon
This tomato hornworm has not been spit upon. Rather, it is covered with pupae of a parasitic wasp. The caterpillar is about 1/2 the size it ought to be. The pupae will hatch out adult wasp. If you see a parasitized hornworm, you should probably leave it in your garden so the emerged wasp can attack other caterpillars. The wasp will not provide immediate control but will reduce population of hornworms.
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P A T H O G E N S
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Pathogens (Microbial Control)
Fungi e.g., Beauveria bassiana, Metarhizium spp. Bacteria e.g., Bacillus thuringiensis Nematodes e.g., Steinernema spp., Heterorhabditis spp. Protozoa e.g,. Nosema locustae
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Gibellula sp. Erynia sp. Spider Leafhopper Cockroach Hymenostilbe sp. Beauveria sp. Beauveria sp. Leafhopper Beetle Katydid
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Biological Control (3 kinds)
Classical (Importation) Reunite old enemies; introduce natural enemies from pest’s geographic origin Augmentation Add what you need; supplemental release Conservation Conserve naturally occurring natural enemies
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Conservation Biological Control
Two main strategies: Modify pesticide use to reduce exposure to natural enemies Modify habitat in favor of natural enemy survival, longevity, and reproduction Attract and retain naturally occurring predators and parasitoids in the crop E-1023: Conserving beneficial arthropods in residential landscapes
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How to Conserve the Good Bugs
Reduce amount/frequency of pesticide use Apply when beneficials are not active Use selective products (e.g., Bt for caterpillar pests) Apply “sweet water” to attract natural enemies Use plants that help feed or shelter beneficials
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Beneficial Flowering Plants
Tansy Goldenrod Coneflower Coreopsis Sunflower Cosmos Caraway Mustards Dill Milkweed Fennel Buckwheat Yarrow Sweet Clover Wild Parsnip Alfalfa Fava Bean Hairy Vetch
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3. Physical/Mechanical Control
Three main methods: Barriers (exclusion) Behavior modification Destruction or killing
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Exclusion Floating row covers and screens – cabbage maggot, flea beetles, cabbageworms Adhesives and burlap – caterpillar pests and aphid-tending ants Trenches – Colorado potato beetle (only those crawling, not flying)
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Behavior Modification
Two general methods: “Push-Pull” technology Mating disruption
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Push-Pull Technology Repel (push) or attract (pull) insect pest away from crop Use pheromones or other lures as baits Trap crops can be considered a push-pull strategy Visual attractants
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Mating Disruption Grape Berry Moth (Mid May):
Place 250 to 400 Isomate-GBM ropes/A (use 400/A in high-risk vineyards) Prevents mating for 90 days in warm southern states Not generally recommended in OK because of small size of vineyards (< 5 acres)
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Killing Crushing Traps Temperature Suction
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Killing Crushing – squash bug eggs on foliage
Traps – boards placed between rows for squash bug nymphs and adults
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Killing Propane torches (flaming), hot-water immersion, steaming, solar heating – wide variety of insect pests Suction – Colorado potato beetle, lygus bug Care must be taken to not harm natural enemies
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Additional Resources Association of Natural Biocontrol Producers
(Info on Biological Control) National Sustainable Agricultural Information Service (ATTRA) Sustainable Agriculture Research & Education (SARE) IPM Oklahoma! entoplp.okstate.edu/ipm (Info on IPM)
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