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Text Version

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Table of Contents
  • How Ecologically Based Pest Management Works
  • Principles of Ecologically Based Pest Management
  • Identification Key to Major Beneficials and Pests
  • Managing Soils to Minimize Crop Pests
  • Farm Feature: Triple Threat to Pests: Cover Crops, No-Till, Rotation
  • Beneficial Agents on the Farm
  • Putting it All Together
    • Designing a Habitat Management Strategy
    • Fine-Tuning Farm Management to Enhance Specific Beneficials
    • Enhancing Biota and Improving Soil Health
    • Strategies for Enhancing Plant Diversity
    • Rolling Out Your Strategy
    • Figure 2: Preventative and Reactive Strategies That Enhance Ecological Pest Management
    • Key Elements of Ecological Pest Management
    • Farm Feature: Rotation, Rotation, Rotation: Alfalfa, Cover Crops Break Pest Cycles
    • Universal Principles, Farm-Specific Strategies
    • Guidelines for Designing Healthy and Pest-Resiliant Farming Systems
    • 10 Indicators of Soil Quality
    • 10 Indicators of Crop Health
  • Resources: General Information
  • Printable Version

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SARE's mission is to advance—to the whole of American agriculture—innovations that improve profitability, stewardship and quality of life by investing in groundbreaking research and education. SARE's vision is...

Rolling Out Your Strategy

Rolling out your Strategy

Once you have a thorough knowledge of the characteristics and needs of key pests and natural enemies, you’re ready to begin designing a habitat-management strategy specifically for your farm.

Choose plants that offer multiple benefits — for example, ones that improve soil fertility, weed suppression and pest regulation — and that don’t disrupt desirable farming practices.
Avoid potential conflicts. In California, planting blackberries around vineyards boosts populations of grape leafhopper parasites but can also exacerbate populations of the blue-green sharpshooter that spreads the vinekilling Pierce’s disease.
In locating your selected plants and diversification designs over space and time, use the scale — field- or landscape-level — that is most consistent with your intended results.
And, finally, keep it simple. Your plan should be easy and inexpensive to implement and maintain, and you should be able to modify it as your needs change or your results warrant.

In this book, we have presented ideas and principles for designing and implementing healthy, pest-resilient farming systems. We have explained why reincorporating complexity and diversity is the first step toward sustainable pest management. Finally, we have described the pillars of agro-ecosystem health (Figure 1):

Fostering crop habitats that support beneficial fauna
Developing soils rich in organic matter and microbial activity

Throughout, we have emphasized the advantages of polycultures over monocultures and, particularly, of reduced- or no-till perennial systems over intensive annual cropping schemes.



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