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Manage Insects on Your Farm

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Table of Contents

How Ecologically Based Pest Management Works

Principles of Ecologically Based Pest Management

Managing Aboveground Habitat

Strategies to Enhance Beneficials

Innovative Tart Cherry Orchard Systems

Farm Feature: No-Till Cover Crops Yield Soil and Pest Benefits

Farm Feature: A Toast to Ecological Grape Production

Sidebar: Reduce Mowing Frequency to Attract Beneficials

Beetle Banks Boost Beneficials

Surrounding Crops With Perimeter Fools Pests

Table 1. Flowering Plants That Attract Natural Enemies

Farm Feature: Resistant Fruit Varieties Reduce Risk
Identification Key to Major Beneficials and Pests

Managing Soils to Minimize Crop Pests

Beneficial Agents on the Farm

Putting it all Together

Resources




Printable Version

Did this book prompt you to make any changes to your farming operation? This and other feedback is greatly appreciated!

Manage Insects On Your Farm: A Guide to Ecological Strategies

  Bulletin

Reduce Mowing Frequency to Increase Beneficials
conducting IPM in pear orchard

USDA ARS Researcher Dave Horton found that less frequent mowing in orchards attracts more beneficial insects to prey on pear psylla, leaf miners and other serious pests.

Tree fruit growers seeking alternatives to broad-spectrum pesticides are looking to manage insect pests using a more environmentally friendly approach. In Washington state pear orchards, SARE-funded research has found that mowing once a month rather than two or three times a month creates alluring habitats for beneficial insects.

An ARS researcher partly funded by SARE ran trials at three orchards and varied mowing frequency (weekly, monthly and just once a season). With less frequent mowing, the natural enemies moved into the ground cover in greater numbers, likely attracted to the pollen and nectar newly available from flowering plants as well as more abundant prey, such as aphids and thrips. Researcher Dave Horton found more lacewing larvae, spiders, ladybug beetles, damsel bugs, parasitoids and minute pirate bugs. “If you mow a lot, you won’t have much in the way of natural enemies on the ground,” Horton said. “By reducing the frequency to once a month, you see a dramatic increase in natural enemies moving into the ground cover without a big increase in pests that feed on fruit.”

Questions remain whether the predators migrate from the ground cover into the pear trees to attack orchard pests, although evidence supports that some predators, especially spiders, appeared in higher numbers in pear trees in the less frequently mowed plots, good news for pear growers.

One of Horton’s farmer collaborators, who received a SARE farmer/rancher grant to study similar ways to manage orchard pests, is convinced that minimal mowing provides control. “I’m practicing this, and I’ve never had to spray for mites,” said George Ing of Hood River, Ore., who has a 16-year-old orchard. “Other orchards that are conventionally treated have more pests. I’m convinced it helped.” At the behest of area growers, who provided a research grant through their pear and apple association, Horton will test how seeding cover crops such as white clover between tree rows affects populations of both pests and pest predators.


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