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Understanding Integrated Pest Management
By
Michael Russell
Integrated pest management, also known as IPM, is a system that combines
biological, cultural, physical and chemical strategies to control pests. In
plain English, that means using the easiest, least environmentally harmful,
cheapest methods first
and using more expensive, toxic methods only as a last
resort.
Careful observation or crop monitoring is the first and most important step
in IPM. You have to know exactly what pest you're dealing with, when it appears,
how many you have and on what plants. For example, after you can recognize
aphids, you may find them on a few rose buds on a single plant in the front lawn
or covering every bush in your prize-winning garden. It may be the beginning of
your gardening system or near the end. How you choose to control the aphids - or
whether you choose to control them at all - depends on all these factors and
more.
Integrated pest management strategies are like a series of steps. The first
steps are the least toxic and the least harmful control methods. The most
potentially toxic controls are last resort steps.
Cultural control: Giving plants optimal growing conditions - soil fertility,
water, light and freedom from competing weeds - is the key to this first step.
Other good cultural practices include using pest- and disease-resistant
varieties and crop rotation, which means moving particular crops to new parts of
the garden each year.
Crop sanitation: Keeping pests and diseases out of the garden in the first
place is more than half the battle won. Inspecting new plants, cleaning your
tools, eliminating weeds and using best watering practices help prevent the
spread of potential problems.
Mechanical control: Prevent pests from getting on your plants by covering
them with special fabrics or using hot water, air fire and the heat of the sun
to kill them without poisons. Simply knocking pests into a can of soapy water
does the trick, too.
Biological control: Every pest has a natural control, whether it's predator
or disease. You can buy and release many of these control organisms or encourage
the ones that already exist around your garden.
Chemical control: As a last resort, apply the least toxic pesticides. The
best ones target only the pest and don't affect the innocent bystanders, such as
bees, spiders and other beneficial insects. These pesticides also don't hang
around in the environment where they can continue to affect other organisms long
after their use.
Another factor that farmers - and you - must consider is how much pest or
disease damage you can tolerate. Perfection comes at a very high price. Even
farmers who must make a living or go bust based on the success of their crops
have what they call an economic threshold, when the cost of the damage exceeds
the cost of control. They expect to lose a portion of the crop completely and
probably have another portion somewhat blemished. For them, it's an economic
reality, but for most home gardeners, it's a matter of accepting less than
perfection on 100 percent of your flowers and vegetables.
Michael Russell Your Independent guide.
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