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Web-based Decision Tools for Nursery IPM

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Title: Web-based Decision Tools for Nursery IPM


1
Web-based Decision Tools for Nursery IPM
http//pnwpest.org/farwest05/
Len Coop, Assistant Professor (Senior
Research) Integrated Plant Protection Center,
Botany Plant Pathology Dept. Oregon State
University
2
Problems of pest management in Commercial
Nurseries
  • Diversity - Huge variety of plants and potential
    pest problems
  • Chemical drift potential - Proximity between
    plants leads to unwanted drift, causing plant
    toxicity, secondary pest outbreaks
  • Low cosmetic thresholds need for near perfect
    appearance of plants and intolerance for pest
    damages

3
IPM has unique aspects in the Nursery industry
  • Potential to change environmental conditions for
    some nursery crops
  • Need for sustainability beyond nursery setting
  • Example control spruce spider mite w/miticide
    harmful to predator mites short term control

4
Integrated Pest Management common sense
principles
  • No silver bullet
  • There is no single best pest control method or
    approach
  • Treat causes, not symptoms
  • Is that browning of leaves caused by a mite,
    virus, or ?
  • Understand the biology e. g. increasing
    humidity a bit could be the long term solution
    with spider mite problems
  • Pest presence ? pest problem
  • A few aphids in the spring could be attracting
    predators, not threatening your plants
  • Wait-and-see vs just-in-case
  • Preventative pesticides as insurance is not
    healthy
  • If you kill the natural enemies, you inherit
    their work
  • Predators and parasites do a great job let them!

5
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7
Typical IPM questions and representative decision
tools
  • Who? and What? Pest identification keys,
    diagnostic guides, management guides
  • Good online support for nursery crops
  • When? Phenology models (crops, insects, weeds),
    Risk models (plant diseases)
  • Limited online support for nursery crops
  • If? Economic thresholds, crop loss models,
    chemical selection, sequential and binomial
    sampling plans
  • Some online chemical selection support
    information
  • Virtually no online support other areas
  • Where? GPS, GIS, precision agriculture
  • No online support (most crops)

8
Google search strategies
- be specific (2 4 key words often works
well) - Google can spell for you -use and -
in front of a word to force inclusion/exclusion
9
Google search greenhouse whitefly poinsettia
http//www.entomology.umn.edu/cues/index.html
10
Online decision guidelines and models for the NW
Nursery Industry insects and mites
11
Example toxicity ratings of selected compounds to
mite predator and key biocontrol agent,
Neoseiulus fallacis for use in ornamentals
12
PNW Pest Management Handbooks -online editions
13
Online decision guidelines and models for the NW
Nursery Industry - Weeds
14
Nursery IPM pest alerts and email lists
15
Navigation -search engine, -menus, -previous/nex
t page, -table of contents
16
Search results section links plus version with
highlight matches
17
highlight matches result
18
Ken gray photos -additional photos search engine
19
Key Gray photo search results borer - need to
scroll down to species of interest
20
Poplar and Willow borer - numerous additional
damage diagnostics slides for this species beyond
the one linked from the PNW Insect Handbook
21
Adult stage photo linked from handbook
22
Features of Ken Gray photos
enlarged
standard
unretouched
23
Numerous damage diagnostic photos available
24
Fact pages (pdf)available for many insects
25
Fage pages from R.E. Berry's book Insects and
mites of economic importance in the PNW
26
yellow bar links to selected websites of
relevance to the chapter and section
27
http//pep.wsu.edu/hortsense/
WSU Extension Hortsense biology and management
of Horticultural crops including
ornamentals (primarily for home gardeners)
28
Links to crop profiles and pest management
strategic plans (PMSPs)
29
Online decision guidelines and models for the NW
Nursery Industry Plant Diseases
30
Example material from the BC Ministry of
Environment Online IPM for landscape pests -
manuallessonshttp//wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/epd/epdpa/
eripm/landshtm/Chap10.htm
31
Disease risk models
  • Like insects, plant pathogens respond to
    temperature in a more-or less linear fashon.
  • Unlike insects, we can measure development in
    degree-hours rather than degree-days.
  • In addition, many plant pathogens also require
    moisture at least to begin an infection cycle.

32
Some generic disease models applicable to a
variety of diseases and crops Model Disease
Crops
Gubler-Thomas Powdery
Mildew grape, tomato, lettuce, cherry
, hops Broome et al. Botrytis cinerea grape,
strawberry, tomato, flowers Mills
tables scab, powdery apple/pear,
grape mildew TomCast DSV Septoria,
celery, potato, tomato, Alternaria alm
ond Bailey Model Sclerotinia, peanut/bean,
rice, melon rice blast, downy
mildew Xanthocast Xanthomonas walnut --------
--------------------------------------------------
---------
33
Practical disease forecasts

FIVE DAY DISEASE WEATHER
FORECAST 1537 PDT WED, OCTOBER 01, 2003
THU FRI SAT SUN
MON DATE 10/02 10/03
10/04 10/05 10/06 ...SALINAS PINE... TEMP
74/49 76/47 72/50 72/49
76/49 RH 66/99 54/96
68/99 68/96 58/96 WIND SPEED MAX/MIN (KT)
10/0 10/0 10/0 10/0 10/0 BOTRYTIS INDEX
0.12 0.03 0.09 0.48
0.50 BOTRYTIS RISK MEDIUM LOW
LOW MEDIUM MEDIUM PWDRY MILDEW HOURS
2.0 5.0 6.5 4.0 4.0 TOMATO LATE
BLIGHT READY SPRAY READY READY
SPRAY XANTHOCAST 1 1 1
1 1 WEATHER DRZL
PTCLDY DRZL DRZL DRZL ------------------------
------------------------------------------- TODAY'
S OBSERVED BI (NOON-NOON) -1.11 MAX/MIN SINCE
MIDNIGHT 70/50 ---------------------------------
---------------------------------- ...ALANFOX...FO
X WEATHER...
34
Online decision guidelines and models for the NW
Nursery Industry insects and mites (cont.)
35
Weather and Degree-day Concepts in IPM
  • Degree-days a unit of accumulated heat, used
    to estimate development of insects, fungi,
    plants, and other organisms which depend on
    temperature for growth.
  • Calculation of degree-days (one of several
    methods) DDs avg. temperature - threshold. So,
    if the daily max and min are 80 and 60, and the
    threshold is 50, then we accumulate
  • (8060)/2 - 50 20 DDs for the day

36
Weather and Degree-day Concepts
  1. Degree-day models accumulate a daily "heat unit
    index" (DD total) until some event is expected
    (e. g. egg hatch)

Eggs start developing 0 DDs
152
26
126
20
106
22
84
14
Eggs hatch 152 cumulative DDs
70
32
38
cumulative
18
20
20
daily
70o-50o20DD
37
IPPC weather data homepage (http//pnwpest.org/wea
)
38
IPPC weather data homepage (http//pnwpest.org/wea
)
39
Degree-day models Examples in pest management
  • Nursery crops - Eur. Pine Shoot Moth Begin
    sprays at 10 percent flight activity, predicted
    by 1,712 degree-days above 28 F after Jan. 1st.
  • Tree Fruits - Codling moth 1st treatment 250 DD
    days after first consistent flight in traps
    (BIOFIX).
  • Vegetables - Sugarbeet root maggot if 40-50
    flies are collected in traps by 360 DD from March
    1 then treat.

40
Degree-day models standardized user interface
41
Link to IWIN forecasts (by zipcode)
42
Degree-day models EPS moth example (cont.)
43
Degree-day models EPS moth example (cont.)
Key events degree-day look up table results
44
Degree-day models EPS moth example (cont.)
Features -missing data estimation, -max-min
temperature forecasts, -historical average
forecasts
45
Degree-day models EPS moth example (cont.)
Summary graph current forecast vs historical
average trends
46
Thinking in degree-days very little predator
mite activity Oct-Mar
http//pnwpest.org/cgi-bin/ddmodel.pl?sppnfa
47
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48
Weather data and maps index page
(http//pnwpest.org/US)
49
US and maps / grasslinks index page
Current DDs Historical average DDs Difference
between current and normal DDs
50
Grasslinks interactive GIS example NE USA
51
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52
Typical IPM questions and representative decision
tools
  • Who? and What? Pest identification keys,
    diagnostic guides, management guides
  • Good online support for nursery crops
  • When? Phenology models (crops, insects, weeds),
    Risk models (plant diseases)
  • Limited online support for nursery crops, more
    on the way
  • If? Economic thresholds, crop loss models,
    chemical selection, sequential and binomial
    sampling plans
  • Some online chemical selection support
    information
  • Virtually no online support other areas
  • Where? GPS, GIS, precision agriculture
  • No online support (most crops)

53
Additional (bonus) slides -gt
54
Hazards of chemicals first and foremost for pest
control
  • Expensive
  • Poisonous
  • Temporary
  • Lead to pest resurgence and secondary pest
    outbreaks (replace one pest w/another)
  • Lead to pesticide resistant pests
  • Tend to exclude other options (biological,
    cultural, resistant plant varieties)
  • Get caught in a pesticide treadmill

55
IPM is an information-intensive systems approach
that is both cost effective and environmentally
sustainable
  • Not IPM
  • ID a symptom, select a broad-spectrum chemical
  • IPM can include
  • Design production system to exclude, prevent,
    tolerate or otherwise mitigate pests and losses
  • ID a problem to species, research its biology
    (life cycle, population dynamics, natural
    biological control, host plant susceptibility,
    potential for pesticide resistance development,
    more), research management options.
  • Sample to determine current and future levels,
    potential impact on the plant, biocontrol agents,
    use thresholds
  • Evaluate all possible controls based on efficacy,
    compatibility, costs, and potential side effects

56
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57
OSU Entomology Ken Gray Slide Collection
  • Ken Gray worked for Pacific Supply in Portland
    and took over 30,000 photos of insects and other
    arthropods, then donated them to OSU Entomology
  • With help from HP, OSU had over 5000 slides
    digitized and input into a database. Web versions
    made via automated Photoshop adjustments
  • The insect handbook links to the collection by
    scientific name. You can search the full online
    collection by common or scientific name
  • The database has not been updated, so new pests
    and name revision updates have not happened
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