Fundamental Principles of Pest Control

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Fundamental Principles Fundamental Principles of Pest Control of Pest Control Dr. Richard M. Houseman Dr. Richard M. Houseman Department of Entomology Department of Entomology University of Missouri-Columbia University of Missouri-Columbia

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Fundamental Principles of Pest Control. Dr. Richard M. Houseman Department of Entomology University of Missouri-Columbia. Objectives. Unit 1: pg. 1-39 “Applying Pesticides Correctly” Pests Identification and Damage Insects Plant Diseases Weeds Vertebrates Pest Management Pesticides - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Fundamental Principles of Pest Control

Page 1: Fundamental Principles of Pest Control

Fundamental Principles of Fundamental Principles of Pest ControlPest Control

Dr. Richard M. HousemanDr. Richard M. Houseman

Department of EntomologyDepartment of EntomologyUniversity of Missouri-ColumbiaUniversity of Missouri-Columbia

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ObjectivesObjectives

• Unit 1: pg. 1-39 “Applying Pesticides Correctly”– Pests– Identification and Damage

• Insects• Plant Diseases• Weeds• Vertebrates

– Pest Management– Pesticides

• Mode of Action

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Core ManualCore Manual

• ‘Learning Objectives’– Clues to what is

important• ‘Terms to Know’

– Definitions of common words

• ‘Test Your Knowledge’– Example test questions

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Pest Management Pest Management (pg.5)(pg.5)

Objectives

1. Prevention = keep from becoming a problem

2. Suppression = reducing to an acceptable level

3. Eradication = destroying an entire pest population

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Management StrategiesManagement Strategies

• Mechanical• Exclusion/removal• Heat/cold

• Biological • Natural enemies,

microbials• Pheromones/hormones

• Cultural• Tilling, burning,

mowing, flooding• Crop rotation, trap crops• Planting/harvest timing

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Management StrategiesManagement Strategies

• Sanitation• Eliminate breeding sites• Remove

pathogens/sources• Disinfect

equipment/tools• Host Resistance

• Using disease-resistant varieties

• Genetics• Manipulate host

resistance• Sterility in pest

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Management StrategiesManagement Strategies

• Chemical• The use of natural or

synthetic substances that directly cause the death, repulsion, or attraction of pests.

Considerations• Mode of Action• Persistence• Non-target effects• Resistance

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Mode of ActionMode of Action

• Mode of Action– The way a chemical kills a pest.

Examples:• Repellents, poisons, eradicants, systemics

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PersistencePersistence

• Persistence– The length of time a chemical is active after being

applied.

Categories: • Non-Persistent

– Kills the pest, breaks down in a relatively short period of time• Persistent

– Residues remain active for period of time after application

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Non-Target EffectsNon-Target Effects

• Non-Target Effects– Pesticide effects on non-pest organisms.

Potential risks:• May kill beneficial organisms• May create new pests

– Ex.-Killing natural enemies of a non-pest.

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ResistanceResistance

• Resistance– Lessening of the effectiveness of a pesticide for

reducing the pest population

Principles: • Chemicals kill only susceptible pests• Survivors pass traits for survival to their offspring• Resistance develops over generations

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ResistanceResistance

• To promote:– Use same pesticide

repeatedly – Use over large areas– Use highly residual

chemicals

• To limit:– Rotate pesticides– Target applications– Use persistent chemicals

wisely

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Pests Pests (pg.3)(pg.3)

• A Pest is any unwanted organism

– Based on what organism does, not on what they are.• Compete for food or water• Cause injury, disease, or annoyance

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Pests Pests (pg.3)(pg.3)

Types of Pests

1. Continuous = nearly always present

2. Sporadic = occasionally present; migratory/cyclical

3. Potential = not normally pests, require control only in certain situations

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Pest Identification Pest Identification (pg.3)(pg.3)

• How to Identify?• Physical features • Damage or Symptoms

• Why Identify?• Pests differ in their habitats, behavior, life cycles, and

susceptibility to control methods.

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Insect & Insect-like Pests Insect & Insect-like Pests (pg.6(pg.6))

• Physical Features• Segmented bodies• Jointed appendages• Exoskeleton made of

chitin• Bilateral symmetry

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InsectsInsects

• Three body regions (pg.6)

• Head– 1 Pair of antennae– Various mouthparts

• Thorax– 3 pairs of legs– 2 pairs of wings

• Abdomen– Body systems

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InsectsInsects

• Life Cycle (pg.7)– Metamorphosis

1. NoneOnly change is size

2. GradualEgg, nymph, adult

3. IncompleteEgg, nymph, adult (H2O)

4. CompleteEgg, larva, pupa, adult

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Insect-like Groups Insect-like Groups (pg.8)(pg.8)

• Arachnids– Spiders, mites, ticks

• 2 regions, 8 legs• Crustaceans

– Pillbugs• 3 regions, >8 legs

• Chilopods– Centipedes

• Many regions & legs• Diplopods

– Millipedes• Many regions & legs

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Insect-like GroupsInsect-like Groups

• Nematodes– Microscopic roundworms

• Mollusks– Slugs, snails

Look like insect larvae– Non-segmented– No metamorphosis

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Insect Pests of PlantsInsect Pests of Plants (pg.10) (pg.10)

• Types of damage– Leaf eating– Plant-sucking– Internal feeding– Stem boring– Root feeding

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Pests of AnimalsPests of Animals (pg.11) (pg.11)

• Types of damage– Stinging– Biting– Blood sucking– Toxin injecting

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InsecticidesInsecticides (pg.15) (pg.15)

• Modes of Action1. Repellents

Keep insects away from an area or host2. Disrupters

Interfere mechanically with body function3. Poisons

Deactivate biological systems in the body– Stomach = must be eaten– Contact = must be touched

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Plant PathogensPlant Pathogens (pg.16) (pg.16)

• Plant Disease– Any condition that causes a plant to function or

appear different from normal

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Plant Diseases Plant Diseases (pg.16)(pg.16)

• Plant Responses to Disease Agents

1. Overdeveloped tissuesie. galls, leaf curls, swelling

2. Underdeveloped tissuesie. stunting, lack of chlorophyll

3. Death of Tissuesie. leaf spot, wilting, blight, cankers

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Plant DiseasesPlant Diseases

• Pathogens include:– Fungi– Bacteria– Viruses– Mycoplasmas

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FungiFungi (pg.16) (pg.16)

• Feed on other organisms• Most are beneficial

– Decomposers• A few parasites

– Feed on living plant tissues

• Reproduce by spores• Microscopic, resistant

stage

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FungiFungi

• Symptoms• Soft rot of fruit• Rusts, smuts• Curling, powdery

mildew of leaves • Spots on leaves

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BacteriaBacteria (pg.17) (pg.17)

• Microscopic• Symptoms

• Blights, spots , rots • Reproduce by cell

division

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VirusesViruses (pg.17) (pg.17)

• Sub-microscopic• Symptoms

• Abnormal growth, mosaics

• Reproduce inside host cell

• Vector transfer

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MycoplasmasMycoplasmas (pg.17) (pg.17)

• Smallest living things• Plant-feeders

• Symptoms• Yellow, stunting

• Reproduce independently

• Insects, mites, grafting

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Fungicides & BactericidesFungicides & Bactericides

• Modes of Action (pg.20)– Protectants

• Applied before or during initial infection

– Eradicants• Applied after infection

– Systemics• Internal transport to all

tissues of plant

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WeedsWeeds (pg.21) (pg.21)

• A weed is any plant growing where it is not wanted.

Effects:– Compete for resources– Contaminate harvest– Harbor pests or release toxins– Look ‘bad’

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WeedsWeeds

• Development (pg.21)– Seedling– Vegetative

Producing leaves, stems, roots

– ReproductiveProducing flowers, seeds

– Maturity

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WeedsWeeds

• Life Cycles (pg.21)– Annuals = one year– Biennials = two years– Perennials = more that

two years

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Weed Identification Weed Identification (pg.22)(pg.22)

• Grasses• Narrow, parallel veins,

round stems• Sedges

• Narrow, parallel veins, triangular stems

• Broadleaves• Fan-like, branching

veins

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Herbicides Herbicides (pg.25)(pg.25)

• Modes of Action– Contact

• kills parts of plant the chemical touches– Translocated

• absorbed and distributed throughout the plant– Selective

• kills only undesireable plants– Non-selective

• kills all plants in an area

or

or

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HerbicidesHerbicides

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Herbicides Herbicides (pg.26)(pg.26)

• Modes of Action (cont’)– Foliar

• Applied to leaves of the weed (foliage)– Soil

• Applied to the ground around the weed

Example:2,4-D is a foliar-translocated-nonpersistent-selective

or

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VertebratesVertebrates (pg.29) (pg.29)

• Have backbones• Many potential pests

• Various situations and impacts.

• Eat crops, kill livestock, transmit disease, contamination, etc.

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Poisons Poisons (pg.30)(pg.30)

• Few pesticides available– Rodenticides: most commonly-used– Piscicides– Avicides

• Usually highly toxic to humans

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SummarySummary

• Identification of the pest and an understanding of its biology is important.

• The best pest management programs combine all of the available control tactics.

• When using chemicals, it is important to understand their mode of action, persistence, risk of resistance, and their effect on non-target organisms.