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Pest Management
NORTH CENTRAL REGION
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Researchers Dora Carmona
and Doug Landis count ground beetles in a vegetative refuge
strip planted to attract insect predators.
Photo by Bob Neumann. |
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When a natural disturbance occurs -- from an event as large as a landslide to
as small as a tree falling in a forest -- it can wreak havoc on the animal, plant
and insect populations in that ecosystem.
Agricultural landscapes, disturbed regularly by tilling, planting, cultivating
and harvesting, can throw the insect world into disarray. Often, such activities
kill off beneficial insects that prey on crop pests. The beneficials usually
do not rebound as quickly as pests adapted to agricultural disturbances.
"When farmers disturb the habitat of the crop field, it resets the succession
of ecological processes, so a series of animal and plants invade, some of which
are weeds and insect pests," says Doug Landis, a Michigan State University researcher
who, along with colleagues Karen Renner and Paul Marino, received a SARE grant
to study ways of attracting beneficial insects into agricultural landscapes.
"Natural enemies have to wait for the pest populations to come back, so they
are always one step behind.
"Where we're farming road to road without leaving any undisturbed habitat,
it's harder for natural enemies to move back."
Landis, other Michigan State researchers and cooperating farmers are working
to better understand just how intensive agriculture affects the insect world.
By minimizing the disastrous impacts crop farming can have on beneficial insect
populations, the researchers hope to identify ways for growers to reduce their
use of synthetic pesticides.
More specifically, they are studying whether retaining or creating undisturbed
areas on farms may harbor beneficial insects that will help keep pest populations
in check.
In one study, Landis worked with farmers who have created filter strips along
field edges to catch runoff. Promoted by the Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS), which will share the cost of installing the vegetative buffers,
filter strips can improve water quality off farm. Landis theorized that the
filter strips, with a mix of native vegetation undisturbed by the plow, would
harbor beneficial insects.
Robert Burns, who raises corn, wheat and soybeans on 250 acres near Midland,
Mich., installed filter strips of either legumes and grass or switchgrass in
1995 to minimize his farm's runoff into nearby Bluff Creek. Water flowing into
the creek, after emptying into two Michigan rivers, eventually empties into
Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron.
"In the spring, or any time you get high water, the runoff takes fertilizers
and whatever else in it to the creek," Burns says. "This way, it has to go through
this grassy-type alfalfa stand, and it filters the water. Before, you'd have
a lot of muddy water and dirt. Now it's more clear."
Landis worked with Burns to test which of the farmer's two 100-feet-wide strips
would shelter more beneficial insects. He looked in particular for ground beetles,
which not only prey on insect pests, but ingest many types of weed seeds as
well.
"Ground beetles are ubiquitous in all terrestrial ecosystems in North America
and probably the world," he says. "In a very conventional farming system, you
would still have ground beetles present, but there would be fewer species and
probably a lower abundance because you're disturbing that habitat frequently."
Landis found the switchgrass -- a native, warm-season grass with tall, stiff
stems -- contained 38 ground beetle species. By contrast, the alfalfa mixture
turned up 29 ground beetle species and the adjacent soybean field just 25.
When he tested the beetles' proclivity to eat weed seeds, Landis found they
destroyed 84 percent of foxtail, a pervasive weed, in one week alone in the
switchgrass strips versus only 17 percent in the soybean field far away. Encouraged,
Landis hopes to study how well the beetles migrate from the filter strips into
the crop field.
"Farmers are already creating these habitats to catch runoff," he says. "For
biological control, their potential has been largely unrealized."
Landis also studied whether refuge strips comprised of cover crops and perennial
plants would similarly attract ground beetles. On several Michigan farms, he
created 10-feet-wide strips of clover, grass and perennials, offering a mix
he hoped would prove attractive habitat. The refuge strips were placed in plots
opposite fields without the refuge vegetation to test which areas the beetles
would prefer.
Refuge strips comprised of orchard grass, clovers and perennial flowering plants
sheltered greater numbers of beetles than the control area. Adding red clover,
frost-seeded into oats, increased beetle abundance in some periods.
"A lot of ground beetles overwinter in the strips," Landis said. "Refuge strips
have a lot of dead plant material and they are insulated with snow. In the spring,
the beetles move into the crop to seek food."
There, he found, the beetles removed more than 40 weed seeds per square foot
per day.
On Burns' field, where they tested existing filter strips, the farmer has noticed
fewer insects since he planted the strips. In fact, he stopped spraying insecticides
in his field after planting the strips, saving him $6 to $10 per acre.
"You're going to have bugs, but the strips give the beneficials a good place
to harbor because it's dense and you don't work it up, so it has a chance to
build up," he says. "However we can get away from sprays and weed killers and
figure out ways to make nature help us instead of work against us is a step
in the right direction." -- Valerie Berton
NORTHEAST
REGION
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Apple researchers found
high rates of fungicide can kill some of the beneficial insects-such
as this lady beetle larvae- that prey on fruit-damaging pests.
Photo courtesy of Northeast Region SARE. |
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The Northeast Region is prime apple-growing territory. In 1995, the nation's most
popular fruit brought about $222 million to the Northeast apple industry.
Apples are good to the region: The fruit often is grown on hilly land that
might not otherwise be farmed, the apple industry provides steady jobs, and
orchards contribute to a working farm landscape prized by tourists, especially
in the autumn.
But apples are tough to grow without synthetic pesticides. Not native to North
America, apples are beset by a rash of diseases and insects that can destroy
or blight them, causing today's consumers to pass them up.
Apple scab, for instance, remains a serious disease for apple growers. In Vermont
alone, it costs growers about $1 million a year in pesticides and other controls.
The devastating fungus was one impetus for a group of Northeast researchers
from Vermont to Pennsylvania to collaborate in Northeast Region SARE's longest-running,
most comprehensive project. Their goal: to identify more sustainable ways of
growing apples.
Researchers hoped to develop a sustainable production system that focuses on
apple varieties naturally resistant to some of the tree's most plaguing pests
and diseases. They conducted detailed economic analyses to determine whether
replacing expensive synthetic treatments with integrated pest management (IPM)
strategies would benefit farmers' pocketbooks, while evaluating the impact of
fewer chemicals on soil, water and wildlife around the orchard ecosystem.
The project -- first led by Lorraine Berkett, plant and soil scientist at the
University of Vermont, then Terry Schettini, formerly of Rodale Institute --
planted, grew and evaluated more than 30 cultivars, or types, on 5,000 trees
over the eight years of the project. Collaborators at Pennsylvania's Rodale
Institute, Cornell University, Rutgers University, the University of Massachusetts
and growers in four states all contributed to the research effort, the first
effort of its kind on such a large scale.
"Our group was really the first to take a look at how scab-resistant cultivars
fit into commercial enterprises," says David Rosenberger, associate professor
of plant pathology at Cornell's Hudson Valley Laboratory.
Project results, in many ways, were encouraging.
The methods project participants used to assess cultivars with immunities to
apple scab so impressed experts in the field that a national evaluation process
based on their work is being established that includes 22 cultivars in 18 states.
Berkett and her colleagues found that fungicide usage can be reduced by 50
to 100 percent with scab-resistant cultivars. By using other IPM methods, a
savings of $200 per acre in direct pesticide costs can be achieved. IPM involves
a variety of insect and disease controls, such as encouraging the presence of
beneficial insects or bacteria that prey on unwanted pests, scouting before
spraying and weighing the value of using a pesticide against potential crop
loss.
Apple producers have responded. Over the course of the project, more than 15
growers have established plantings of cultivars recommended by the research
team. Many more commercial growers adopted IPM techniques; 75 percent of the
apple acreage in Massachusetts alone now is managed under IPM.
Grower Jim Gallot of New Haven, Vt., planted several experimental varieties
in his 30-acre West Meadows Orchard as part of the project. Gallot is confident
the project will help lead to better cultivars because of the way the project
has influenced the industry and other apple scientists.
"We've learned quite a bit from the research," Gallot says. "Instead of just
asking, 'What can we do with Macintosh?' we're thinking about apple-growing
in a new way. It's very important to keep pushing the limits and trying things."
Fungicide research revealed such important data as the minimum amount of fungicide
farmers actually need. Synthetic fungicides can impact the orchard system environment
in complex ways -- researchers found high rates killed some of the beneficial
insects that preyed on apple mites.
"In dropping some fungicides, we learned things we didn't even suspect before,
like some were having a negative effect on mite predators," Gallot says. "Fungicides
aren't as benign on the insect and predatory ecology as we thought. They affect
other things, too, in ways we never imagined."
The research spanned a range of climates and growing conditions from the mid-Atlantic
to northern New England. Project participants also learned more about optimum
apple marketing strategies, from retailing at roadside stands to wholesaling
to large processors.
The breadth of the work aided in the completeness of the project, Berkett says.
"It's almost a new way of doing business, with people from many disciplines
and different states working together," she says. "Within the region, we have
different production systems, different climates and different cultivars."
One of the project's findings on a regional scale proved disappointing: Many
of the scab-resistant varieties the researchers recommend face serious obstacles.
Some cultivars attract other insect pests or diseases; others do not store well
or may have trouble catching consumers' eyes in the marketplace.
Despite the potential negatives, most of the project findings have been well
received by apple and IPM specialists throughout the region. New information
quickly spread to state apple IPM programs.
In Massachusetts, data from the study was included in a project to develop
IPM strategies for combatting sooty blotch and flyspeck, a serious disease in
southern New England.
In New York, researchers discovered that fungicide applications could be delayed
from two to three weeks and still control flyspeck.
And in Vermont, studies on the use of T. pyri, a predatory insect that can
help control the damaging spider mite, continues.
Project participants produced a comprehensive reference, "The Management Guide
for Low-Input Sustainable Apple Production," in 1990. They also developed a
newsletter -- the only publication in the Northeast devoted to alternative apple
production -- and a World Wide Web site called "The Virtual Orchard." -- Susan
Harlow
SOUTHERN REGION
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Planting crimson clover
and reducing tillage allows cotton grower Benny Johnston to
reduce seasonal pesticide use from five applications to two.
Photo by Gwen Roland. |
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For years, the desired standard for cotton farming has been a kind of tidiness
bordering on sterility: nothing but clean-tilled ground between rows and along
field edges before and after each crop.
With no extra vegetation, insect pests had no place to hide.
It went against deeply held beliefs, then, when entomologist Joe Lewis and
horticulturist Sharad Phatak suggested in 1993 that cotton farmers may be better
off using cover crops and vegetative refugia strips, thereby encouraging all
kinds of insects to take up residence in and around their crops.
The two had a hard time convincing any of the south central Georgia growers
they had worked with over the years to even experiment with their new system,
but Benny Johnston finally told them he'd give it a shot.
The willingness of Johnston and his son, who raise about 900 acres of cotton
near Tifton, about 60 miles north of the Florida line, to go along with Lewis
and Phatak's ideas surprised both scientists.
"Benny Johnston's a real good, by-the-book kind of farmer," Lewis said. "I
didn't think he'd be comfortable having any other vegetation growing in his
fields when it came time to plant cotton."
But like a lot of other cotton growers, no matter how conventional, Johnston
was looking for ways to reduce his use of chemical pesticides, for some very
compelling reasons: The cost of inputs keeps rising while the market for chemically
treated cotton shrinks.
As Lewis explains it, U.S. cotton production already has weathered three historic
boom and bust cycles. The first major blow to the industry coincided with the
collapse of the southern economy in the wake of the Civil War. The next plummet
rode in on the hard-shell back of the boll weevil during the early 1920s followed
by the hardscrabble days of the Depression.
The boom started with a chemical input-fueled bang after World War II. And
it was during those hard-driving days that Johnston began farming. His yields
increased initially, but so did his need for applications of increasingly expensive
synthetic fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. Then the chemical inputs grew
less and less effective, and his yields began dropping despite increased applications.
Similar results already had begun to drive other cotton farmers out of production,
and once again, in the 1970s and early '80s, the southern cotton industry fell
on hard times.
Johnston stuck with cotton, but he was looking for a better way and was willing
to believe Lewis and Phatak might have found it. After receiving a SARE producer
grant in 1994, he lent a 20-acre plot to the cover crop and refugia strip experiment,
using the grant to lease the conservation-tillage equipment he'd never needed
before.
The plan was to attract and retain sufficient populations of the kind of insects
that feed on and control cotton pests. The results have been more than encouraging.
Lewis, a research entomologist with the USDA's Agricultural Research Service,
says it seems clear that the use of a leguminous cover crop -- crimson clover
in Johnston's case -- along with conservation-tillage or no-till, leads to fewer
crop-destroying pests. Johnston's conventional crop received five applications
of pesticide per season during the trials, while the cover-cropped and refugia-stripped
fields needed only two.
Lewis sees these results -- along with the virtual eradication of the boll
weevil in North America -- as the genesis of the newest boom in American cotton
production, a boom he's hoping will be much more sustainable than those preceding
it.
"We licked the boll weevil in certain parts of the Cotton Belt with a tough
eradication program in the 1980s," Lewis says. "And now we're finding we can
encourage the kinds of beneficials, including ants and spiders, that help control
all the other cotton pests."
As it turns out, fire ants and other Central American interlopers like the
boll weevil appear to be desirable predators in a cotton field given the right
circumstances. Lewis isn't certain whether they are encouraged by the choice
of a cover crop -- crimson clover, in Johnson's case -- or the fact that their
nests are left relatively undisturbed when clear-tilling is foregone.
Whatever the case, Benny Johnston appears to have proven that a sufficient
population of fire ants, along with a mix of native spiders and a variety of
other beneficials, can hold infestations of common cotton pests such as aphids,
bollworms, armyworms, budworms and stinkbugs to manageable levels.
And that's making more than chemical-weary cotton farmers happy. Patagonia,
a manufacturer of sport clothing, recently announced its intent to purchase
only organic cotton. Other upscale manufacturers are expected to follow suit.
If the innovative practices begun on Benny Johnston's farm take hold across
the Cotton Belt, these companies shouldn't have to look far for the product
they want. And farmers may be able to pull in premium prices for their cotton.
As for Lewis and Phatak, further experiments are convincing them that cover
crops alone may be the better approach to sustained yields and sustained beneficial
bug populations.
"At first," Lewis says, "we thought you had to have a pretty high concentration
of refugia strips worked into the crop to keep the insect density high enough
to be effective, and that's going to limit the room you have for planting your
crop. But now we're thinking you can achieve the same effect or better with
the use of cover across the entire field. When it comes time to sow cotton,
you keep the cover on and just drill narrow bands through it for planting."
Farmers benefit from reduced erosion, more organic residue after the cover
matures and dies, less nutrient leaching, a natural weed suppressant and a great
place to attract and grow the bugs that will eat unwanted pests.
Lewis says his attempts to change the way cotton farmers feel about insects
and cover is driven by a belief that a truly balanced ecosystem -- which isn't
possible under the "chemical umbrella" cotton farming's existed under for 40
years -- will provide long-lasting benefits for both growers and the environment.
-- David Mudd
WESTERN REGION
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Winter wheat growers fighting
jointed goatgrass weeds with soil bacteria could reduce tillage
costs and herbicide use.
USDA photo. |
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Western winter wheat growers have a deep desire to uproot an invasive, persistent
weed called jointed goatgrass. They plow it under, burn it off, mow it down and
change crop rotations.
Despite their best efforts, jointed goatgrass infests at least 5 million acres
in wheat-growing areas from Washington to Texas and causes more than $145 million
in losses each year. As farmers' frustrations grow, so does the jointed goatgrass,
which has gained ground rapidly over the past 20 years.
"It is such a tremendously fast-spreading weed, it can take over a field and
ruin the quality of your wheat crop," says Eddie Johnson, a small grain producer
from Wilbur, Wash. "Some of the fields in the Palouse region have 20- to 30-percent
goatgrass infestations."
In dryland production areas of the Pacific Northwest, where annual rainfall
ranges from 8 to 24 inches, jointed goatgrass steals moisture from winter wheat,
reducing yields dramatically. Just a few weeds per square foot can cut yields
by 25 percent. Even losses of 50 percent are common.
At the grain elevator, wheat with jointed goatgrass seed can be downgraded
from top-quality export wheat to feed grain at a loss of a dollar per bushel.
"At 50 bushels per acre, it adds up quickly," says Johnson, who has battled
jointed goatgrass in some of his own fields for more than five years.
To find better options, Johnson and other growers cheerfully have donated some
of their weedy wheat to the innovative research of Ann Kennedy of USDA's Agricultural
Research Service housed at Washington State University. A soil microbiologist,
Kennedy works with bacteria that slow the growth of jointed goatgrass but leave
wheat alone.
"We're taking bacteria from the soil, culturing them in the lab, applying them
back on the field at higher rates and having a negative effect on weeds," she
explains. The bacteria she uses, called pseudomonads, attack the roots of jointed
goatgrass, inhibiting its growth, while leaving wheat unscathed.
What makes jointed goatgrass so tough to deal with is its close kinship to
wheat. Both crop and grassy weed share a common set of chromosomes and similar
germination and growth patterns. In the field, it's hard to tell the two apart
before they mature.
No available herbicide can effectively take out jointed goatgrass without harming
wheat. If farmers turn to intensive tillage to get rid of the weed, they increase
erosion. If they shift to spring cropping, they limit their profits and diversification.
With the SARE grant, Kennedy tested six promising bacterial isolates, first
in the greenhouse and then in the field. Compared with the dramatic effects
of herbicides, her biological weed control appeared to just "nick" jointed goatgrass,
she says. But some of the bacteria suppressed weed growth by 30 to 70 percent
-- enough to give wheat a competitive advantage.
"The interesting thing is that you don't have to kill off a weed totally and
you don't have to have a clean field to have a good crop," Kennedy says. "Any
time that we can suppress jointed goatgrass growth by 40 percent or more, we
generally see an increase in yields."
Kennedy's research showed wheat yield increases of up to 16 percent when weed
growth was stunted by at least 40 percent. When bacteria were combined with
less-than-lethal doses of herbicide, she says, the "double whammy" inhibited
jointed goatgrass' growth even more.
For growers, managing jointed goatgrass with natural soil bacteria could help
reduce costs, tillage and herbicide use. Using less herbicide could reduce the
risk of groundwater contamination.
Using bacteria also could make conservation tillage a viable option. Applying
the bacteria to fields is fairly simple and doesn't require sophisticated equipment,
Kennedy says.
In the ground, the added soil bacteria survive just long enough to accomplish
their weed control mission, dying off as temperatures rise.
Although bacteria must be reapplied to the soil each year, that protects the
environment, Kennedy says. "Ecologically speaking, it's better not to make any
permanent changes."
Another promising finding was that some bacteria reduced jointed goatgrass
seed production, which could help curtail its rapid advance across the West.
The joints of the annual weed shatter into seed spikelets that are carried by
wind, equipment and animals. In loads of grain, the lighter-than-wheat weed
seeds stay on top, where they can blow into new fields. Once established in
soil, jointed goatgrass seeds can survive for years.
Within the next decade, Kennedy is hopeful that the soil will yield commercially
available weed-fighting bacteria. However, she found that jointed goatgrass
samples collected throughout the West varied in their responses to soil bacteria.
More research will be needed to find a solution.
Another key will be educating producers to accept less than 100-percent weed
control with biology and teaching them how to care for soil bacteria.
"When I work with growers, I tell them that agri-microbials like these are
living organisms," Kennedy says. "You can't just leave them on the
dashboard of the pickup and assume they are going to live."
Johnson thinks producers will be glad to learn more
about a new ally against jointed goatgrass. "And, this is a natural,
sustainable way of using our own soil." -- D'Lyn Ford
Ten Years
of SARE Home
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