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Introduction
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A crimson clover cover crop
prevents erosion, improves soil, fixes nitrogen and attracts
beneficial insects. Photo by Dave Clark, USDA ARS |
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Agricultural pests — insects, weeds, nematodes and disease
pathogens — blemish, damage or destroy more than 30 percent
of crops worldwide. This annual loss has remained constant since
the 1940s, when most farmers and ranchers began using agrichemicals
to control pests.
Agrichemical methods of protecting crops are costly to the farmer,
potentially harmful to the environment and, despite widespread use,
have not proved 100-percent effective. Problems persist due to pest
resistance and the uncanny ability of pests to overcome single-tactic
control strategies.
A National Academy of Science 1997 Proceedings paper, “A
Total System Approach to Sustainable Pest Management”
called for “a fundamental shift to a total system approach
for crop protection [which] is urgently needed to resolve escalatory
economic and environmental consequences of combating agricultural
pests.”
Many farmers are seeking such an approach, one that relies less
on agrichemicals and more on mimicking nature’s complex relationships
among different species of plants and animals. Known as “ecologically
based pest management” or simply “ecological pest management,”
this approach treats the whole farm as a complex system.
The old approach strives for 100 percent control of every pest
using one strategy or agrichemical for each pest. The new approach,
ecological pest management, aims to manage the whole farm and keep
pests at acceptable populations using many complementary strategies.
Ecological pest management is a preventive approach that uses “many
little hammers” or strategies, rather than one big hammer,
to address pest problems on the farm or ranch.
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Aleiodes indiscretus wasp
parasitizing a gypsy moth caterpillar. Photo by Scott Bauer,
USDA ARS |
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Ecological pest management employs tactics that have existed in
natural ecosystems for thousands of years. Since the beginning of
agriculture — indeed, long before then — plants co-evolved
with pests and with the natural enemies of those pests. As plants
developed inherent protective mechanisms against pests, they were
helped by numerous partners in the ecosystem, for example:
Beneficial
insects that attack crop insects and mites by chewing them up
or sucking out their juices
Beneficial
parasites, which commandeer pests for habitat or food
Disease-causing
organisms, including fungi, bacteria, viruses, protozoa and nematodes
that fatally sicken insects or keep them from feeding or reproducing.
These organisms also attack weeds.
Insects
such as ground beetles that eat weed seeds
Beneficial
fungi and bacteria that inhabit root surfaces, blocking attack
by disease organisms
By integrating these natural strategies into your farming systems,
you can manage pests in a way that is healthier for the environment
and eliminates many of the problems associated with agrichemical
use. Knowing the life cycles of pests and understanding their natural
enemies allows you to better manipulate the system to enhance, rather
than detract from, the built-in defenses available in nature. Another
National Academy of Science report (1996), Ecologically Based
Pest Management (EBPM), stated that EBPM “should be based
on a broad knowledge of the agro-ecosystem and will seek to manage
rather than eliminate pests” in ways that are “profitable,
safe, and durable.”
In addition to reducing pest damage, shifting your farming system
to ecological pest management will bring multiple benefits to your
operation. For example, moving from monoculture to longer rotations
improves water- and nutrient-use efficiency. Cover crops planted
to attract beneficial insects also suppress weeds, improve the soil,
provide moisture-conserving mulch, fix or store nitrogen for subsequent
crops and contribute to overall nutrient management goals.
About Manage Insects on Your Farm
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Workers harvest celery next
to a strip of bachelor button flowers planted to attract beneficial
insects. Photo by Eric Brennan, Univ. of Calif. |
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Pests of agricultural crops include weeds, insects, pathogens and
nematodes. This book is focused mostly on managing insect pests,
but it addresses all crop pests to some degree, because no pest
or category of pests can be addressed in isolation. The ecological
pest management strategies presented here will contribute to overall
ecosystem health.
We first lay out the principles behind ecologically based pest
management. Then, we describe strategies used by farmers around
the world to address insect problems within the context of their
whole farm systems. A full section is devoted to how you can manage
your soil to minimize insect damage. Flip to Chapter
5 to learn about beneficial insects you can put to work for
you. Photos of some beneficials and pests can be found on pages
50–54.
Throughout the book, we present specific examples of successful
pest management strategies. While some examples may fit your farm
or ranch, most are crop- or climate-dependent and will serve mostly
to stimulate your imagination and help you better understand that
while every system is unique, the general principles of ecological
pest management apply universally. Use this book as a stepping-stone
to develop a more complex, more diverse system on your own farm.
Look for “Tip” boxes throughout the book for specific
suggestions.
This book does not address the multiple ecological benefits of
further diversifying your farm or ranch by integrating livestock
into the system. If you also raise animals, consult other information
resources about the management and benefits of integrated crop-livestock
systems (Resources).
In short, nature has already provided many of the tools needed
to successfully combat agricultural pests. This book aims to describe
those tools and present successful strategies for using them to
manage insects on your farm or ranch.
Cover Crop System Deters Pests
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Steve Groff’s cover
crop of cereal rye and flowering rapeseed provides multiple
benefits compared to neighboring plowed fields. Photo by R.
Weil, Univ. of Maryland |
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In Lancaster County, Pa., Steve Groff built a farming system based
on cover crops, intensive crop rotation and no-till. Although he
designed his crop and vegetable farm without targeting specific
pests, Groff and the scientists using his farm as a real-world laboratory
have documented significant benefits in pest management, including:
Increased
populations of beneficial insects in cover crops
Reduced
populations of Colorado potato beetles in tomatoes
Delayed
onset of early blight in tomatoes
Minimal
to no aphid pressure on any of his crops
Reduced
cucumber beetle damage in pumpkins
Tolerable
levels of European corn borer, thanks to releases of the parasitic
wasp, trichogramma ostriniae
Reduced
weed pressure, although monitoring and managing weeds are still
a top priority on his farm
Those benefits come at some cost, however. Groff spends more time
managing his complex system to ensure that cover crops are seeded
and killed at the right time and to scout for weeds. Moreover, he
monitors soil temperature because no-till and cover crop residues
delay soil-warming in the spring.
Not all pest management problems have been solved, either. Spider
mites still attack Groff’s tomatoes, particularly in dry years,
while slugs sometimes hide under cover crop residues in wet years.
Nonetheless, consider the numbers. Groff has cut pesticide use by
40 percent and seen soil organic matter increase by almost 50 percent
with a 10 percent net increase in yield averaged over all crops.
“It’s working for us,” Groff says.
Groff’s system is described in greater detail here.
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