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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

Identification Key to Major Beneficials and Pests

Managing Soils to Minimize Crop Pests

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: Preventive and Reactive Strategies That Enhance Ecological Pest Management

Key Elements of Ecological Pest Management

Farm Feature: Rotation, Rotation, Rotation: Alfalfa, Clover Crops Break Pest Cycles

Universal Principles, Farm-Specific Strategies

Guidelines For Designing Healthy And Pest-Resilient Farming Systems

Ten Indicators of Soil Quality

Ten Indicators of Crop Health

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

Strategies for Enhancing Plant Diversity

As described, increasing above-ground biodiversity will enhance the natural defenses of your farming system. Use as many of these tools as possible to design a diverse landscape:

Diversify enterprises by including more species of crops and livestock.
Use legume-based crop rotations and mixed pastures.
Intercrop or strip-crop annual crops where feasible.
Mix varieties of the same crop.
Use varieties that carry many genes — rather than just one or two — for tolerating a particular insect or disease.
Emphasize open-pollinated crops over hybrids for their adaptability to local environments and greater genetic diversity.
Grow cover crops in orchards, vineyards and crop fields.
Leave strips of wild vegetation at field edges.
Provide corridors for wildlife and beneficial insects.
Practice agroforestry, combining trees or shrubs with crops or livestock to improve habitat continuity for natural enemies.
Plant microclimate-modifying trees and native plants as windbreaks or hedgerows.
Provide a source of water for birds and insects.
Leave areas of the farm untouched as habitat for plant and animal diversity.

As you work toward improved soil health and pest management, don’t concentrate on any one strategy to the exclusion of others. Instead, combine as many strategies as make sense on your farm. Nationwide, producers are finding that the triple strategies of good crop rotations, reduced tillage and routine use of cover crops impart many benefits. Adding other strategies — such as animal manures and composts, improved nutrient management and compaction-minimizing techniques — provides even more.


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