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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

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Manage Insects On Your Farm: A Guide to Ecological Strategies

  Bulletin

Principles of Ecologically Based Pest Management

Introduction

A whole farm approach calls for designing a system that integrates ecological pest management into other aspects of crop and soil management. Each decision you make in designing your system for managing pests should be based in part on the impacts on the rest of the system.

Your steps toward implementing ecological pest management should be linked with soil organic matter management, soil nutrient management, tillage, and other efforts to reduce erosion and compaction. Creating field boundaries, borders and buffers designed to protect waterways also can lead to positive impacts on pest populations.

The following sections outline management strategies designed to augment the good bugs that will help ward off pests. You will learn ways to select plants that attract and feed beneficial insects, manage habitat to discourage pests, exploit plant breeding and natural plant defenses in your system, and maintain and improve soil diversity to benefit plant health.

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