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Insect Management Options in Organic Farming

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Title: Insect Management Options in Organic Farming


1
Insect Management Options in Organic Farming
  • Phil Mulder
  • Professor, Interim Dept. Head, Dept. Extension
    Coordinator and Extension Entomologist
  • Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology
    Oklahoma State University
  • Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

2
Limitations under the USDAs National Organic
Program (NOP)
  • Ingredients must be natural substances, or
    synthetics included on the National List (7CFR
    205.600-205.607).
  • Some natural substances are also prohibited
    (inert ingredients may be prohibited in some
    cases See EPA List 4A or 4B).
  • All substances must be approved by the Organic
    Materials Review Institute (OMRI) and/or the
    state certification agency.
  • Further restrictions require preventative,
    cultural, and physical methods (includes release
    of beneficial insects) must be the first choice
    for pest control. If ineffective, a botanical,
    biological or synthetic on the national list may
    be used, if conditions are documented in the
    organic farm plan.
  • This requirement reflects an historic practice
    relying on the use of biological and cultural
    practices such as crop rotation,
    diversification, habitat management, beneficial
    organism releases, sanitation, and timing before
    resorting to limited use of permitted pest
    control substances.

3
Procedures and Methods in Adopting an Organic
Management Plan
  • Understand the pests and beneficial organisms
    that usually occur in the crop and anticipate the
    pest problems likely to occur.
  • Pests more effectively controlled when numbers
    are low and early in their life cycles.
  • Pay attention to crop rotations and crop residue
    incorporation, to avoid buildup in pest species.
  • What varieties or crops to grow
  • When to plant, to avoid pest problems
  • Good recordkeeping on pest problems builds a
    foundation for next seasons pest control
    strategies.

4
Procedures and Methods (continued)
  • Correctly identify the pests and beneficial
    organisms present and note when they occur most
    commonly.
  • Helps alert a grower to potential problems before
    crop losses occur.
  • Use pheromones and other trapping methods when
    available for key pests, to determine timing of
    population cycles and predict local increases in
    activity.
  • Some cases where mating disruption can be used to
    prevent successful mating, and reduce subsequent
    damaging populations (e.g. fruit and nut pests).

5
Procedures and Methods (continued)
  • Make frequent or at least weekly checks for pest
    activity.
  • Use a sweep net, hand lens, drop cloth.
  • Inspect the underside of leaves.
  • Identify tolerable levels (action thresholds) for
    pest activity in specific crops.
  • Pests feeding directly on the consumable product
    can be tolerated much less than defoliators in
    most cases.

6
Specific Methods for Managing Arthropod Pests
Organically
  • Cultural control
  • Mechanical control
  • Biological control
  • Chemical control

7
Cultural Control
  • Coordinate planting and harvest dates to avoid
    certain pests.
  • Sweet corn and corn earworm
  • Plant later crops upwind of early crops or plant
    them in isolated fields.
  • Use non-susceptible cover crops to improve
    fertility and provide a source of organic matter.
  • Incorporate a grass species into a rotation,
    these tend to be resistant to many insect and
    disease pests of common cash crops.

8
Cultural Control (continued)
  • Plant field borders or strips within the field of
    species or varieties that are different from the
    main crop
  • Flowering plants along borders of fields can
    provide habitat and food for beneficial insects.
  • Maintain a trap crop in a vigorous state, so
    pests may never want to leave
  • Spray the trap crop if they start to leave (e.g.
    pearl millet)
  • Manage overwintering sites for many of the true
    bugs (stink bugs, squash bugs, alfalfa weevils,
    etc.)
  • Lumber, box piles, storage buildings, weedy field
    borders, etc.

9
Mechanical Control
  • Soil Tillage and organic matter decomposition
  • Allow a longer fallow period before planting,
    exposes insects to predators (e.g.- birds) or
    removes food supply for cutworms, wireworms, root
    maggots and certain mites.
  • Handpicking and vacuuming certain insect pests in
    small plantings is quite effective
  • Tomato hornworms, lygus bugs, squash bugs, etc.
  • Pest barriers can help in high value crops.
  • Floating row covers, plastic tunnels, reflective
    mulches

10
Biological Control
  • Many beneficial organisms help regulate pest
    numbers in nature without the aid of chemicals.
  • When naturally occurring biological control is
    not adequate for maintaining a pest below levels
    that cause losses, biological control can
    sometimes be increased .
  • Classical biological control, Augmentation,
    Conservation and enhancement.

11
Classical Biological Control
  • Deliberate introduction and establishment of
    exotic natural enemies into areas where they did
    not exist.
  • Usually against invasive species.
  • Several steps in doing this properly include
  • ID the pests native range, search its native
    range for candidates, ship them into quarantine
    facilities for study to exclude contaminants and
    confirm that no negative impacts exist in the new
    country, then finally increase their numbers
    before release.
  • Only Government agencies or University
    Experiment Stations
  • 100s of insect and weed examples have been
    successful.
  • Vedalia beetle on cottony cushion scale, musk
    thistle weevil on musk thistle, cactus moth on
    prickly pear cactus, etc.

12
Augmentation
  • Supplementing the numbers of naturally occurring
    natural enemies with releases of lab-reared or
    field collected natural enemies.
  • Inoculative release building up populations of
    natural enemies earlier than normal, or
    establishing it where it is not present.
  • Releasing predatory mites in almonds or
    strawberries, mosquito fish in rice fields to
    control mosquitoes, release of bindweed mites to
    control bindweed in wheat, etc.

13
Augmentation (Continued)
  • Supplementing the numbers of naturally occurring
    natural enemies with releases of lab-reared or
    field collected natural enemies.
  • Inundative release periodic releases of natural
    enemies with no expectations of establishment.
    So. additional releases will be required
    throughout the season
  • Releasing Trichogramma wasps for controlling
    caterpillar pests, release of whitefly
    parasitoids (Encarsia) in the greenhouse,
    entomopathogenic nematodes used against several
    soil dwelling insects, etc.

14
Tips for Releasing Beneficials
  • Be sure to release a sufficient amount.
  • Make sure adequate water is available before the
    release.
  • Release organisms at sundown, to allow them time
    to find a safe harborage
  • Release in specific locations where infestations
    are present.
  • Use cages and/or beneficial insect meal to keep
    insects around if pests are not present in
    sufficient numbers.
  • Provide additional habitat when possible
    (includes flowering plants and clover mixes).

15
Conservation and Enhancement
  • Modifying or enhancing the local environment to
    conserve beneficial species or enhancing their
    activities.
  • Increasing plant diversity in the ecosystem (e.g.
    reduce monocultures). Requires careful
    consideration of the complex interactions between
    plant and animal populations.
  • Habitat manipulation with cover crops, alternate
    hosts, insectary plants, and soil supplements to
    conserve native natural enemies.

16
Chemical Control
  • If organic growers choose to consider chemical
    treatment they may need to consider several
    factors including
  • Mammalian toxicity, effects on beneficial
    species, adequate coverage and volume, residual
    activity.
  • All organic materials, many of which are
    botanicals, are not exclusively safer than
    conventional pesticides (e.g. Nicotine is one
    the most dangerous substances known, yet it is
    considered a botanical insecticide, others like
    sulfur are good at suppressing certain disease
    problems, but may cause skin and/or eye
    irritation).
  • For the organic grower wishing to conserve
    beneficial organisms, botanicals and soap-based
    products should be a last resort because of their
    broad spectrum capabilities.

17
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Effects on beneficial organisms
  • Indirect effects through starvation of
    beneficials, which could prompt their migration
    out of the field.
  • Adequate Coverage
  • Requires high volumes of water (100-200 gallons
    or more per acre) with thick canopies and with
    certain materials.
  • May require more nozzles and high pressure to
    produce the desired droplet size for optimum
    coverage (Electrostatic or airblast sprayers).
  • Proper Timing is essential regardless of
    equipment.
  • Must hit a susceptible organism at its most
    vulnerable stage.

18
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Residual capacity of most organically approved
    materials is limited degrade rapidly in the
    environment.
  • Repeated applications may be necessary, so
    concern over resistance, but not as great with
    short residual materials.
  • In addition, pests are unlikely to develop
    resistance to materials such as oils and soaps
    that use physical actions such as suffocation and
    entrapment.

19
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Aphids oils, soaps, pyrethrum/rotenone
    combinations, kaolin clay, Pyola(canola oil
    pyrethrins) GE-derived?, garlic sprays,
    diatomaceous earth, Beauveria bassiana (Mycotrol
    O).
  • May affect beneficials that are attracted to
    honeydew. Allow time for lag in beneficial
    populations before controlling aphids (e.g.
    greenbugs rarely need control past March 15 in
    southwest Oklahoma).

20
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Whiteflies soaps and oils (many applications),
    sticky traps, seaweed powder, Beauveria bassiana
    (Mycotrol O).
  • Thorough coverage under plant leaves necessary.
  • First look for parasitized whitefly pupae.

21
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Leafminers Pyrethrins, rotenone, azadirachtin
    (Neem), Entrust (spinosad).
  • Sprays will slow the buildup of native wasp
    parasitoids.

22
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Leafhoppers Pyrethrins, rotenone and kaolin clay
    on nymphal stages, Beauveria bassiana (Mycotrol
    O).
  • Kaolin clay (Surround ) acts as a deterrent,
    coats the plant. Leafhoppers dont like to feed
    through it or get it on their body.

23
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Flea beetles Soaps, pyrethrin/rotenone
    combinations, sabadilla, garlic sprays,
    onionmint, Pyola(canola oil pyrethrins)
    diatomaceous earth.

24
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include.
  • Stinkbugs Difficult to control as adults with
    any materials. First two instars can be managed
    with soap sprays or Beauveria bassiana (Mycotrol
    O). Dont let these build up or cannot be
    controlled. Can use traps to monitor.

25
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Mites sulfur sprays or dusts, mineral,
    vegetable-based, or neem seed oils, kaolin clay
    (Surround), garlic oil. Many concoctions
    including glue and buttermilk sprays.
  • Oil sprays watch out if temperature and RH add
    up to more than 140 to avoid phytotoxicity.

26
Chemical Control (continued)
  • Pests controlled by organically approved
    materials include
  • Caterpillars Bacillus thuringiensis var.
    kurstaki (Btk) Smaller worms and use thorough
    coverage practices, since ingestion of the
    material by the insects is required. Entrust,
    spinosad product quite expensive, but very
    effective.

27
Brief Lesson on Bt formulations
  • Make certain you are obtaining the correct
    formulation for the task.
  • BtK For Lepidoptera caterpillars immature
    moths and butterflies. 2-5 prolegs including anal
    prolegs. Thuricide cost16 oz. 15.46
  • Dont confuse with Hymenoptera caterpillars
    immature sawflies (wasps). More than 5 prolegs.
    Btk will not control these insects.
  • Bts must be ingested (foliar feeding
    caterpillars), paralyzes and destroys the cells
    of the insect gut wall, causes septecemia.
    Degrades rapidly in sunlight.

28
Brief Lesson on Bt formulations
  • Make certain you are obtaining the correct
    formulation for the task.
  • Bti var. israelensis for Diptera immature
    flies, primarily mosquitoes. (Mosquito Dunks).
  • May also have some effect on other fly species.
  • Cost 6 pack of dunks17.95
  • 40 lb granular150

29
Brief Lesson on Bt formulations
  • Make certain you are obtaining the correct
    formulation for the task.
  • Btt var. tenebrionis or san diego for
    Coleoptera larvae immature beetles.
  • Marketed for elm leaf beetles, Colorado potato
    beetle and may work on others.

30
Brief Lesson on Bt formulations
  • Make certain you are obtaining the correct
    formulation for the task.
  • Bp Bacillus popillae (Milky spore) for Japanese
    beetle larvae.
  • Not generally effective on annual white grubs or
    other scarab beetles.
  • Cost 40 oz. 80

31
Drawing a distinction between Farming vs.
Gardening
  • Many organic strategies are more applicable on a
    small scale (home garden) but may not be
    practical or affordable in large acreage
    situations (farming).
  • Organic strategies involve a personal commitment
    to doing things differently for the preservation
    of the ecosystem for the next generation.
  • Organic strategies generally require more money,
    time and dedication to detail than conventional
    methods, therefore, for the farmer, there must be
    an economic benefit.
  • IPM practitioners are always looking for
    compromises that incorporate organic alternatives
    and more eco-friendly materials into the arsenal
    of tools available to the farmer. These
    compromises (often unacceptable as organic),
    represent safe, eco-friendly and more
    economically sound approaches to pest management.
  • May incorporate insect growth regulators and
    other highly specific insecticides not certified
    as organic.

32
List of Resources for Organic Growers
  • Handout with various website and handbook
    resources from general information to insect
    guides, and insect, weed and disease management.
  • Several organics catalogs available (e.g.
    Arbico organics).
  • Several resources for IPM practitioners, which
    utilize several possible mechanisms for managing
    pests below economically established thresholds
    (e.g. Great Lakes IPM).
  • Excellent tutorial with detailed information on
    much of this presentation is available through
    the North Central Regional Extension Publication
    401, Alternatives in Insect Management
    Biological and Biorational Approaches by Rick
    Weinzierl and Tess Henn Available on-line at
    http//www.aces.uiuc.edu/vista/abstracts/aaltinsec
    .html
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