Climate Change and integrated pest management
75 / 95
Abstract
To establish an integrated pest management program, the following basic guidelines should be followed. Understand the biology of the crop and identify the key pests, knowtheir biology, recognize the damage they inflict and evaluate their
economic status; identify the key environmental factors that affect pest and potential pest species in the ecosystem; consider concepts, methods and materials that individually or in combination, will help to permanently suppress pest; anticipate unforeseen developments and move with caution to face the changes that can occur within it; seek the weak links in the lifecycle of the key pest species and direct control practices as narrowly as possible at these weak links; avoid broad impact
on the resource ecosystem and consider and develop methods, which preserve, complement and augment the biotic and physical mortality factors that characterize the ecosystem, and diversify the ecosystem.
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Downloads
Submitted
2017-11-30
Published
2017-11-30
Issue
Section
Articles
License
Complete copyright vests with the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, who will have the right to enter into an agreement with any organization in India or abroad engaged in reprography, photocopying, storage and dissemination of information contained in it, and neither author nor his/her legal heirs will have any claims on royalty.
How to Cite
Pal, R., Singh, R., & Prasad, C. S. (2017). Climate Change and integrated pest management. Indian Farming, 67(3). https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IndFarm/article/view/76141