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Controlling invertebrate pests in agriculture [electronic resource]

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Provides a detailed examination of the application of pesticides and how they may be integrated into more holistic approaches.

Title Controlling invertebrate pests in agriculture [electronic resource] / Jessica Page and Paul Horne.
Publisher Collingwood, Vic. : CSIRO Pub.
Creation Date 2012
Notes Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
English
Content Cover
Foreword
Contents
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Agricultural ecosystems
Before modern pesticides and fertilisers
What lives in a crop?
Predator-prey cycle
Understanding the type of interaction
2. Pesticides
Insecticide resistance
Cross-resistance
Residues in produce
withholding periods
Non-target mortality
Disruption of biological control (primary and secondary pests)
Insecticide resistance and beneficial species
Selective insecticides
'Safe' insecticides?
Insecticide Resistance Management Strategies (IRM)
Zero tolerance
Pesticides: problems and how they can fit with other management optionsPheromones
Conclusion: minimal pesticide use
3. Pest species
Lifecycles and life stages
Pest response when biological control is disrupted
When classical biological control is lost
When existing biocontrol agents are disrupted
Where do pests come from?
4. Beneficial species (biological control agents)
Predators or parasitoids
Commercially produced beneficials
Examples of commercially available beneficial species
Lifecycles
Movement of beneficial species
Naturally occurring beneficial species
Common questions about beneficial speciesEffectiveness of biological control
5. Cultural controls
What are cultural controls?
Manipulating non-crop plantings for pest management
Controlling weeds
Plant health
Crop hygiene
Cocoa pod borer
6. Integrating control measures to maximise degree of control
Integrating the three control measures available
The role of monitoring
Making changes in pest management
Decision-making
A crisis in pest control
Two examples of pest control
7. Changes in scientific assessment
Changes in scientific assessment and information loss
Factors influencing successful control of pestsFuture strategies
8. Examples of changing pest management: specific crops
Changing to IPM
Where a change to IPM did not work
'We tried IPM and it did not work'
Successful examples of change to IPM
A final point
Glossary
Common and scientific names of species mentioned in this book
Species mentioned, listed by scientific name
References
Index
Extent 1 online resource (127 p.)
Language English
National Library system number 997010719013305171
MARC RECORDS

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