Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is an effective and environmentally sensitive approach to pest management. It uses natural predators, pest-resistant plants, and other methods to preserve a healthy environment in an effort to decrease reliance on harmful pesticides. Featuring forty chapters written
Integrated Pest Management
β Scribed by Ray F. Smith, J. Lawrence Apple, Dale G. Bottrell (auth.), J. Lawrence Apple, Ray F. Smith (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 207
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The past decade is probably unparalleled as a period of dynamic changes in the crop protection sciences-entomology, plant pathology, and weed science. These changes have been stimulated by the broad-based concern for a quality environment, by the hazard of intensified pest damage to our food and fiber production systems, by the inadequacies and spiraling costs of conventional crop protection programs, by the toxicological hazards of unwise pesticide usage, and by the negative interactions of independent and often narrowly based crop protection practices. During this period, the return to ecological approaches in crop protection was widely accepted, first within entomology and ultimately within the other crop protection and related disciplines. Integrated pest management is fast becoming accepted as the rubric describing a crop proΒ tection system that integrates methodologies across all crop protection disΒ ciplines in a fashion that is compatible with the crop production system. Much has been written and spoken about "integrated control" and "pest management," but to date no treatise has been devoted to the concept of "inΒ tegrated pest management" in the broadened context as described above. Most of the manuscripts in this volume were developed from papers presented in a symposium at the annual meeting of the American Association for the AdΒ vancement of Science held in San Francisco in February, 1974. In arranging that symposium, the editors involved plant pathologists, entomologists, and weed scientists.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
The Origins of Integrated Pest Management Concepts for Agricultural Crops....Pages 1-16
Integrating Economics and Pest Management....Pages 17-27
Implementing Pest Management Programs: An International Perspective....Pages 29-38
Pest Management: Principles and Philosophy....Pages 39-50
Pest Management in Ecological Perspective....Pages 51-57
The Agroecosystem: A Simplified Plant Community....Pages 59-70
Tobacco Pest Management....Pages 71-106
Systems Approach to Cotton Insect Pest Management....Pages 107-132
Pest Management on Deciduous Fruits: Multidisciplinary Aspects....Pages 133-147
Integrated Forest Pest Management: A Silvicultural Necessity....Pages 149-177
Progress, Problems, and Prospects for Integrated Pest Management....Pages 179-196
Back Matter....Pages 197-200
β¦ Subjects
Plant Pathology
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