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Integrated
Pest Management
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The
objective of the Consortium's work on Integrated Pest Management
(IPM) is to provide rice-wheat based cropping systems with ecologically-based
pest management that promotes the health of crops, animals and
humans, and makes full use of natural and culturally acceptable
control processes and methods. These processes and methods will
be developed and tested by agricultural research institutions
putting the needs of the farmer and the farm family first. Chemical
pesticides will be used and recommended only where and when
other measures, including host resistance and biological control,
clearly fail to keep pests below economically damaging levels.
All interventions will be need-based and applied in ways that
minimize undesirable side-effects. The term 'Pests' includes
insects, diseases, weeds, vertebrates, and nematodes.
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This
objective will be achieved by a diverse set of activities, many
of which are already on-going. However, some additional activities,
largely additive, integrative, and experimental in nature, will
be required to implement the holistic vision of the Consortium
and to develop an improved research methodology for the 21st
century.
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IPM
Definitions
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As
with overall agricultural research, pest management research
has hitherto focussed on single pests, be they insects, pathogens,
weeds or vertebrates. This approach is no longer adequate to
stem the losses which are afflicting the region's rice-wheat
farmers. As a result, the Consortium is designing a new multi-pest,
multi-disciplinary approach to pest management for rice-wheat
cropping. The aim is to provide pest control in the cropping
system with minimum chemical use and minimum adverse impact
on the environment.
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The
Consortium defines pests to include insects, diseases, weeds,
vertebrates, and soil organisms such as nematodes. In keeping
with the holistic philosophy of the Consortium, pest management
is seen as part of the ecological consequences of rice-wheat
cropping, and intricately linked with the other Consortium fields
of activities, notably soil and water management, crop establishment
and policy issues. The Consortium's pest management strategy
involves:
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multidisciplinary
research by NARS scientists with farmers, extension agents
(NGOs) and scientists from IARCs,
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the
accurate diagnosis of farmers' needs (putting farmers first),
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the
formulation of strategies appropriate to meet farmers' short
and long-term needs,
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socio-economic
monitoring and impact assessment as an integral component
of IPM
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Integrated
Pest Management involves activities carried out by farmers that
result in the density of potential pest populations being maintained
below levels at which they become pests, without endangering
the productivity and profitability of the farming system as
a whole, the health of the farm family and its livestock, and
the quality of the adjacent and downstream environments.
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