Term
2 Americans that advocated the use of biological control |
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Definition
-Asa Fitch in New York -Benjamin Walsh in Illinois |
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Term
2 animals that were intended to be used for pest control, but became pests themselves |
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Definition
-cane toad (to control insects) -mongoose (to control insects and other pests) |
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Term
2 species that were collected by Koebele to counteract the Cottony-Cushion Scale Crisis |
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Definition
-a tiny parasitic fly named Cryptochaetum iceryae
-a specialist predatory lady beetle, Rodolia cardinalis, or the vedalia beetle |
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Term
A goal of many biocontrol programs |
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Definition
to establish a self-sustaining system that will require few or no additional inputs |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Attributes of natural enemies |
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Definition
-Host/prey specificity -Density dependent response -Strong reproducer – “rate of increase” -Good searching ability -Synchrony with target pest -Ability to survive low food supply |
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Term
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Definition
-Entomophthoralean fungal pathogen of insects -White fuzzy coat, often on beetles, caterpillars |
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Term
Biological Control relies on... |
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Definition
the interactions among populations, and on top-down effects within food webs |
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Term
Biological control could, therefore, be thought of as applied... |
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Definition
“applied ecology” or “applied population dynamics”. |
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Term
Density dependent factors |
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Definition
inflict mortality as a function of the population density (predators, food, pathogens) |
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Term
Density independent factors |
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Definition
inflict mortality with no regard for population density (weather, pesticides) |
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Term
Density independent mortality factors |
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Definition
mortality factors that kill the same proportion of the population, regardless of population density |
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Term
Density of hosts/prey can be influenced by ______, which in turn influences ______. |
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Definition
the first trophic level the third trophic level of natural enemies |
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Term
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Definition
those that attack hosts/prey in multiple habitat types (such as in shrubs, grasses, and trees) |
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Term
Economic injury level (EIL) |
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Definition
point at which economic injury begins |
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Term
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Definition
point at which action should be taken to prevent economic loss |
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Term
Erasmus Darwin's contribution to the idea of biological control |
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Definition
Suggests use of natural enemies for control of pests |
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Term
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Definition
the response of predators to prey in which the number of prey eaten by predators changes in response to prey density.
example: more prey may be eaten for example, when the prey density increases |
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Term
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Definition
The pattern of attack by a natural enemy in relation to the number of prey/hosts and the time involved |
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Term
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Definition
Asian multi-colored ladybeetle (our first bug of the day) |
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Term
How we sample is affected by... |
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Definition
the biology of the pest and the type of damage it causes. |
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Term
In biological control, our focus is on ______, emphasizing ______. |
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Definition
the interactions among populations the importance of top-down forces |
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Term
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Definition
Consistent, significant damage |
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Term
Kirby and Spence's contribution to the idea of biological control |
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Definition
In England in 1815, Kirby and Spence described the value of biological control in their 4-volume “Textbook of Entomology”, which was an early and authoritative work. |
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Term
Mynah bird in biological control |
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Definition
Mynah birds were moved from India to Mauritius in 1762 to help control locusts (migratory grasshoppers), and they established and were fairly successful. |
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Term
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Definition
a response by predators to prey in which the density of predators in a given area increases due to reproduction in relation to increasing prey density. Migration into an area of high prey density is also a numerical response. |
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Term
One very important factor that influences synchrony in time |
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Definition
the developmental time and the time it takes to go through a generation |
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Term
Our goal in biological control |
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Definition
to manipulate systems to be able to maintain pest populations at levels below that which would be economically or aesthetically damaging |
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Term
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Definition
chemicals produced by organisms to communicate with other members of the same species |
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Term
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Definition
Evaluation of pest-induced injury |
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Term
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Definition
includes changes in populations over time |
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Term
Population regulation relative to population dynamics often implies... |
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Definition
a return of the population to some sort of equilibrium level as a result of a density-dependent process |
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Term
Population regulation relative to population dynamics refers to... |
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Definition
the control of that population |
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Term
Primary Ecological events |
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Definition
changes in population density that occur when individuals are added to the population either through birth or immigration into an area, or when they are lost from the population through death or emigration |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Number captured in traps or observed per unit time |
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Term
Some components of IPM include... |
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Definition
plant health, host plant resistance, biological controls, cultural controls, and pesticides |
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Term
Synchrony can be complicated by... |
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Definition
the need of organisms to survive through seasonal rough periods, such as winter in temperate climates or the dry season in the Tropics |
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Term
Synchrony in ______ and ______ is critical. |
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Definition
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Term
The Cottony-Cushion Scale Crisis |
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Definition
Serious outbreaks in 1888 threatening fledgling California citrus industry |
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Term
The big story that triggered the growth of biological control revolved around... |
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Definition
the cottony cushion scale, a serious pest of citrus |
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Term
The two types of pheremones most often used in IPM |
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Definition
-sex pheromones -aggregation pheromones |
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Term
Thomas Malthus's contribution to the idea of biological control |
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Definition
Population growth and suppression |
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Term
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Definition
feeding or nutrition, deriving from the Greek ‘trophikos’, meaning nourishment |
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Term
Types of natural enemies can include... |
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Definition
organisms that function as predators, parasitoids or pathogens |
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Term
Typically, there are no more than ______ trophic levels in an ecosystem |
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Definition
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Term
Ultimately, biological control is... |
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Definition
the interaction of populations under a particular set of conditions |
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Term
a food web consists of... |
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Definition
all of the linkages through which energy flows in an ecosystem, or food chains |
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Term
an example of early biological control |
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Definition
We know from Chinese records that ants were used in citrus production in southern China as early as 200 BC, and these same ants are still used today. Growers still use bamboo rods to create bridges between trees to allow ants to forage away from their nests in the trees. |
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Term
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Definition
The action of predators, parasites, and pathogens to reduce the population of another organism to levels lower than would occur in their absence |
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Term
chart showing the different types of functional responses |
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Definition
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Term
cultural practices in IPM |
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Definition
-Modifications of the cropping system or practices that discourage pest colonization or build up -Examples are planting date, sanitation, reduced tillage, and use of cover crops |
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Term
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Definition
the ability of natural enemies to respond positively to increasing host/prey density |
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Term
depiction of the interaction of factors in the history of biological control |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the status of IPM today |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Attacks economic portion of crop (e.g., fruit) |
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Term
disadvantages of plant resistance in IPM |
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Definition
must be planned in advance of the crop going out into the environment |
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Term
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Definition
concentrate on a single or very few habitat types |
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Term
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Definition
parasites that live on the outside of the host's body |
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Term
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Definition
parasites that develop inside the host |
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Term
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Definition
attack multiple types of prey |
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Term
generalists need not synchronize with any one host/prey species, but must still... |
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Definition
assure survival by synchronizing with available food resources |
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Term
genetic manipulation in IPM |
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Definition
utilizes genetic methods to suppress pest populations, typically rendering pests sterile through mating with irradiated mates released into the environment at high numbers |
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Term
how Asa Fitch advocated biological control |
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Definition
by encouraging wheat growers to allow natural enemies to help them control Hessian fly |
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Term
how Benjamin Walsh advocated biological control |
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Definition
by advocating for growers to stop trusting con artists and instead have more faith in nature |
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Term
how C.V. Riley, Albert Koebele, and D.W. Coquillett acted against the Cottony-Cushion Scale Crisis |
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Definition
Riley was able to obtain $2,000 supposedly to send Koebele to Australia to participate in an international exposition in Melbourne. Koebele went to Australia, but didn’t go to the expo. Instead he spent his time looking for natural enemies of the cottony-cushion scale, and sent them back to Coquillett, who immediately began rearing them. |
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Term
how biological control got going at the Federal level |
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Definition
At the federal level, Leland O. Howard set up a lab in Connecticut to introduce natural enemies against an exotic pest, the gypsy moth. Harry Smith left federal employment at the gypsy moth lab and moved to California in 1913, where he set up the first dedicated biological control program in the United States. This program, moved to Riverside in 1923, was the core for biological control in the United States until the 1960s. Smith also coined the term “biological control” in 1919. |
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Term
how biological control has been influenced by other factors |
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Definition
Advances in the sciences are couched in the social and historical contexts of the era, which are shaped by the philosophical, religious, and sociological settings. The development of biological control has been influenced by all of these things, and the growth of systematics, knowledge of natural history, and ecology. |
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Term
how cover crops and border planting can be beneficial in IPM |
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Definition
Cover crops and border plantings can help encourage beneficial insect populations to build up |
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Term
how many living things are pests? |
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Definition
the vast majority are not |
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Term
how metapopulations benefit natural enemies |
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Definition
they provide opportunities for natural enemies to track hosts/prey in space and time, and allow stability of all populations over time by providing refuges for hosts/prey from which they can re-colonize other patches and allow natural enemies to persist |
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Term
how most pesticides are used |
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Definition
therapeutically, in response to pest infestations |
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Term
how natural enemies find food in clumped populagtions |
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Definition
by using signs to find hosts and prey, just like humans do when looking for clumped food resources |
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Term
how natural enemies must track their enemies |
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Definition
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Term
how pest management changed between the 1940's and 1960's |
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Definition
Emergence of synthetic organic insecticides (e.g., cyclodienes, DDT, organophosphates) to the point where other methods were almost excluded |
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Term
how pest management changed in the early 1900's |
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Definition
the introduction of inorganic insecticides (e.g., lead arsenate, sulfurs) |
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Term
how pesticides are grouped |
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Definition
Pesticides are grouped into classes, based on chemical structure and/or general modes of action or target sites |
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Term
how populations in a metapopulation occur in a natural system |
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Definition
they are embedded in a matrix of space that is not suitable for the populations to persist, but movement among patches by the organisms does occur, and interactions among subpopulations maintain the overall metapopulation |
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Term
how reduced tillage can be helpful in IPM |
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Definition
it minimizes soil erosion, but also has a strong tendency to reduce pressure from insect pests |
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Term
how the third trophic level can shape evolution in the first trophic level |
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Definition
by altering the distribution of herbivores in space and time, as herbivores try to escape natural enemy pressure |
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Term
how to calculate population growth |
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Definition
Population growth = (birth + immigration) – (death + emigration) |
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Term
how traps can be helpful in IPM |
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Definition
by providing insights into the population trends of the pests |
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Term
in 1961, the term "pest management" was coined for this reason |
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Definition
to shift thinking from control to management within thresholds |
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Term
in IPM, degree to which any one tactic is used will vary with... |
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Definition
cropping system and socioeconmic constraints |
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Term
in a food web, energy is lost at each transfer due to... |
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Definition
inefficiency of transfer, conversion of energy into materials that cannot be processed, and energy costs for maintenance of the organisms |
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Term
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Definition
Attacks non-economic portion of crop (e.g., leaves of many crops) |
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Term
insect predators that are in the "True Bug" group (Hemiptera) |
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Definition
insects that have piercing-sucking mouthparts which they use to impale their prey and extract fluid |
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Term
integrated pest management (IPM) |
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Definition
Use of all available tactics to maintain pests at acceptable levels |
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Term
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Definition
predation between species that also feed on the same prey/host item |
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Term
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Definition
a population of populations where spatially distinct subpopulations occupy separated patches of habitat |
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Term
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Definition
Relatively common, limited damage |
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Term
nature of the breadth of a natural enemy’s host/prey range has this effect |
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Definition
affects the top-down outcomes |
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Term
once the economic injury level (EIL) is exceeded,... |
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Definition
the costs of action and losses will outweigh the benefits of acting |
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Term
once the economic threshold (ET) is exceeded,... |
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Definition
the benefits of action outweigh the costs |
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Term
parasitic wasps can leave behind these indicators of parasitism |
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Definition
-holes in the host -cocoons |
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Term
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Definition
an insect, that when immature, parasitizes another insect, subsequently killing its host, and is otherwise free-living as an adult |
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Term
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Definition
a microorganism that lives as a parasite on or in a larger host organism, causing debility or mortality |
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Term
pest management prior to the 1900's |
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Definition
Tolerance, cultural practices (hand picking, burning, etc.), limited biological control |
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Term
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Definition
Use of heritable physical or chemical properties of the crop to discourage pest colonization, growth, and/or survival relative to a related, more susceptible crop germplasm |
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Term
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Definition
a group of individuals that are members of a single species living together in the same habitat and likely to interbreed |
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Term
population distribution that promotes random searching behavior |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
an animal that eats more than one other animal during its lifetime |
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Term
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Definition
used before pests arrive, such as flea treatments |
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Term
scientific name for predatory earwig |
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Definition
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Term
similarities and differences between big-eyed bugs and chinch bugs |
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Definition
-big-eyed bugs are slightly larger than chinch bugs -They may have similar coloration, but are always broader across the head than the area just behind (shoulders) -Chinch bugs, on the other hand, have a narrow head, never broader than the area directly behind |
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Term
some Biological Control Organizations |
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Definition
-IOBC/OILB: International Organization for Biological Control -CIBC: Commonwealth Institute for Biological Control -CAB: Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau |
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Term
some bad things insect pests do that people don't like |
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Definition
-they destroy millions of dollars worth of crops, fruits, shade trees and ornamental plants, stored products, household items, and other materials valued by man. -They vector diseases of man and domestic animals. -They attack man and his pets causing irritation, blood loss, and in some instances, death. |
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Term
some biologically based approaches to pest management |
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Definition
-Biological control (natural or manipulated) -Host plant resistance -Cultural controls -Pheromones -Genetic techniques |
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Term
some characteristics of density dependence |
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Definition
-Number of prey/hosts killed is a function of the number of prey/hosts available -May be a function of space – Number of prey/hosts per unit area that the natural enemy can traverse -May be a function of time – Number of prey/hosts available over a period of foraging time -Considered to be important for pest management |
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Term
some characteristics of predatory earwig |
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Definition
This insect is actually an omnivore that feeds on plant material and on prey items. It is a generalist found in many cropping systems. Females of this predator guard their eggs after they lay them, for up to 10 days, usually leaving just before they hatch. But then, after the eggs hatch, the kids need to scatter fast before a very hungry mother in the neighborhood eats her young. These predators eat a wide variety of prey, including a number of different species of caterpillars. |
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Term
some details about Assassin Bugs (Reduviidae) |
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Definition
-they generally appear oval orelongate -often black and orange-red or brown -larger than most of the other predaceous bugs, especially the giant wheel bug -they have a head that has a particularly long and narrow appearance -They feed on most other insects -will inflict a painful bite if handled |
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Term
some details about Beauveria bassiana |
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Definition
-Entomophthoralean fungal pathogen of insects -White fuzzy coat, often on beetles, caterpillars
This fungus is rather common worldwide and is a definite generalist. It has been mass produced and is commercially available in various names (e.g., Mycotrol). |
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Term
some details about Big-Eyed Bugs (Lygaeidae) |
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Definition
-stout bodied -about 1/8 inch long with prominent eyes that give the insect its name -slightly larger than chinch bugs -can often be found with populations of chinch bugs -also feed on caterpillars and insect eggs |
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Term
some details about Minute Pirate Bugs (Anthocoridae) |
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Definition
-1/8 - 1/4 inch long -black and white as adults -have colorful yellow-orange-brown nymphs depending upon instar -produces painful bite -effective predator of thrips and the eggs of many insect and mite species |
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Term
some details about Predaceous Damsel Bugs (Nabidae) |
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Definition
-1/8 - 3/8 inch long -may be cream colored to dark brown to black depending on the species -The most common species are slender, elongate insects that are most active in mid summer -They feed on eggs and immature stages of many pest insects |
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Term
some details about Predaceous Plant Bugs (Miridae) |
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Definition
-less well known than other predaceous true bugs -have been shown to be active predators of thrips, lace bugs, aphids, moth eggs and other insects of importance in the landscape |
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Term
some details about pesticides |
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Definition
-Materials designed to kill pests -Most are regulated by EPA -Efficacy and environmental risks vary among and within classes -Generally used in response to pests, but some are prophylactic |
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Term
some details about pheremones in IPM |
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Definition
-Exclusive to Arthropods -Used to attract pests and monitor their activity in the landscape -Usually used to monitor rather than make decisions, but some thresholds are based on trap results |
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Term
some details about some the spined soldier bug (a type of Stink Bug (Pentatomidae)) |
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Definition
-known predator of more than 100 pest species -Adults are about ½ inch long, light brown, and somewhat dorso-ventrally flattened -The shoulders are drawn out into the appearance of a spine, hence the name -Both the more colorful nymphs and the adults feed and may attack prey much larger than themselves -Adults overwinter and become active in the spring when new eggs are deposited -Caterpillars and leaf beetle larvae are common prey items for stink bugs. |
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Term
some details about using plant resistance in IPM |
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Definition
-Extremely important and typically economical -Prophylactic management -Developed using conventional or molecular methods |
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Term
some early observations of parasitism |
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Definition
-1602: the naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi described wasps emerging from larvae of the sulfur butterfly, Pieris rapae -1662: the illustrator Jan Goedart, who was noted for his insect images, illustrated small chalcid wasps emerging from a butterfly pupa |
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Term
some examples of how resistance to pesticides developed in response to pesticides |
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Definition
-1914: San Jose scale resistant to lime sulfur -1946: House fly in Sweden resistant to DDT. -1997: >500 arthropods resistant to 1 or more insecticide class (35% are flies). |
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Term
some important factors of synchrony in predator and pest populations |
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Definition
-the developmental time and the time it takes to go through a generation -the number of generations that a natural enemy has per year |
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Term
some insect predators that are in the "True Bug" group (Hemiptera) |
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Definition
-Assassin Bugs (Reduviidae) -Big-Eyed Bugs (Lygaeidae) -Minute Pirate Bugs (Anthocoridae) -Predaceous Damsel Bugs (Nabidae) -Predaceous Plant Bugs (Miridae) -some species of Stink Bugs (Pentatomidae) |
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Term
some management methods that can be used in IPM |
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Definition
-Pesticides -Biological Control -Pheromones -Genetic Manipulation -Plant Resistance -Cultural Practices |
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Term
some pest management options |
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Definition
-Tolerate damage -Chemically-based approaches -Biologically based approaches |
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Term
some pesticides that aren't regulated by the EPA |
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Definition
-oils -soaps -diatomaceous earth |
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Term
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Definition
-Mechanical -Biological -Cultural -Chemical -Regulatory |
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Term
some things that act in a food web in a bottom-up direction, affecting the higher trophic levels |
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Definition
defensive plant compounds and trichomes, or plant hairs |
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Term
some things that act in a food web in a top-down direction, affecting the lower trophic levels |
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Definition
Elimination or reduction of herbivores |
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Term
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Definition
-Regular -Key/severe -Sporadic/Occasional -Minor -Direct -Indirect |
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Term
some types of sampling in IPM |
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Definition
-Absolute Estimates -Relative Estimates -Population Indices |
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Term
some ways individuals can leave a population |
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Definition
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Term
some ways individuals might enter a population |
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Definition
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Term
some ways to sample using direct counts |
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Definition
Visual, suction, sweep, shake |
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Term
some ways to sample using population indicies |
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Definition
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Term
some ways to sample using trap capture |
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Definition
Pheromone, bait, visual, suction, emergence |
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Term
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Definition
attack only one or a few types of prey |
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Term
the 4 essential components to the type II functional response |
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Definition
-Rate of successful search -time predator and prey are exposed -handling time -hunger |
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Term
the IPM interactions that will be discussed in this class |
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Definition
the interactions of biological control with pesticides, plant resistance, and cultural practices |
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Term
the IPM management methods that are chiefly specific to arthropods |
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Definition
-pheremones -genetic control |
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Term
the amount of insect species that are considered pests |
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Definition
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Term
the component that needs to be added to describe the sigmoid curve in the type 3 functional response |
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Definition
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Term
the contributions of Charles Valentine Riley to biological control |
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Definition
-Discovered relationship between yucca moth and yucca plants -Published >2400 articles -Taxonomist, natural historian -First US Government Entomologist -arranged to have predatory mites sent to France to help control grape phylloxera, which was devastating the wine industry (1873) -Moved parasites of a weevil to new areas in Missouri (1870) -Key player in importation of Cotesia (=Apanteles) glomeratus into US from to control the imported cabbageworm Europe (1883) |
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Term
the effect of resistance to pesticides |
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Definition
-rendered various pesticides useless in some cropping systems -put pressure on industry and growers to develop novel pest management tools |
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Term
the effect of the pesticides that became popular and when their effects became apparent |
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Definition
-Environmental disruptions and damaging biomagnification related to insecticide use -serious negative effects on wildlife -pest resistance appears -Secondary pests
1950s and 1960s |
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Term
the foundation elements of IPM |
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Definition
-“Natural Mortality” in Agroecosystem -Economic Thresholds -Sampling |
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Term
the foundation of IPM is made up of... |
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Definition
sampling procedures, or being aware of what pests are present, in what number, and then having economic thresholds to relate the pest presence to potential economic losses, and develop a management plan |
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Term
the function of other patches of habitat for metapopulations in a natural system |
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Definition
serving as refugia, giving the aphids a source from which they can spread and colonize new patches, and allow the predators to have a persistent source of prey in the future |
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Term
the goal in biological control |
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Definition
-to reduce the target pest population -to select the most appropriate species for those interactions and conditions |
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Term
the importance of functional response |
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Definition
it can provide insights into natural enemy performance |
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Term
the initial focus of IPM when it was first enumerated in 1959 |
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Definition
-plant resistance -biological control -pesticides -use of thresholds |
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Term
the options organisms have to survive seasonal rough periods |
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Definition
-survive the period where you are through hibernation or some other means -migrate to a better climate |
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Term
the person who is considered the father of biological control and why |
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Definition
Charles Valentine Riley because of his many significant activities in the field |
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Term
these characteristics of target pests affects biological control |
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Definition
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Term
this led to something of a re-emergence of biological control as a practical and viable approach for pest management |
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Definition
-the book "Silent Spring" -the emergence of the IPM concept |
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Term
this limits the number of trophic levels |
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Definition
it is limited to a point where the cost of obtaining energy exceeds the energy available for use |
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Term
this pushed biological control into the background |
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Definition
The emergence of cheap and effective pesticides in the 1940s and 1950s |
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Term
this tool was developed to determine when pesticide treatments were necessary |
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Definition
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Term
this triggered interest in biological control of weeds |
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Definition
Hugely successful control of Opuntia in Australia with Cactoblastis cactorum (1920’s) |
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Term
types of Host/Prey Specificity |
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Definition
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Term
types of changes in natural enemy numbers in response to changing pest population numbers |
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Definition
-Numerical response -Functional response |
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Term
what Harmonia axyridis (Asian multi-colored ladybeetle) is believed to have displaced and why |
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Definition
It is believed to have displaced some native lady beetle species because of its aggressive nature. |
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Term
what IPM has been seen as in recent times |
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Definition
the best way balance the needs of pest management with protection of human health and the environment |
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Term
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Definition
integrate and optimize multiple tactics into an effective strategy that achieves economic, environmental, and social goals |
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Term
what IPM was initially developed for |
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Definition
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Term
what bottom-up forces do in food webs |
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Definition
they move from the lower levels to affect the upper trophic levels |
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Term
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Definition
-Very anthropocentric concept -Organism that affects our health, food, fiber or quality of life -May only be a certain stage |
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Term
what many parasitic wasp species do that can help manage pests |
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Definition
attacking the egg stage, completing their entire life cycle inside minute insect eggs |
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Term
what parasitic flies do to pests |
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Definition
they deposit an egg or in some cases, a live larva, on or near the body of their host -the larva burrows into its host and consumes the internal tissues |
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Term
what parasitic wasps do to the host |
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Definition
-lay their eggs in or on the host and the immature stage of the wasp feeds on the hosts tissues -may emerge from its host to pupate or pupate within the body of its host. |
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Term
what this Biological Control class will focus on |
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Definition
the importance of natural mortality in pest management, as well as the active use of biological control agents as components of IPM strategies |
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Term
what top-down forces do in food webs |
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Definition
they ultimately influence the distribution and populations of the Consumers |
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Term
what type of response is it when predators move into an area with high prey density |
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Definition
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Term
what you want in a stable system |
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Definition
long-term pest suppression |
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Term
when Cottony-Cushion Scale became a serious problem again and why |
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Definition
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Term
when IPM was officially recognized and by whom |
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Definition
1972 by the Nixon administration |
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Term
when exponential growth can occur |
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Definition
when there are no limitations to growth |
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Term
when genetic manipulation is used in IPM |
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Definition
in special cases, typically with pests that are spread over restricted areas, with limited immigration and emigration |
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Term
when genetic manipulation works best in IPM |
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Definition
works best for pests that only mate once |
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Term
when ideas of population ecology began to develop |
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Definition
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Term
when population growth is said to be exponential |
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Definition
when the rate of growth of a population gets faster as the population gets bigger |
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Term
when the type 1 functional response is fairly rare |
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Definition
when handling time is nearly zero and predators never become satiated |
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Term
when were lady beetles recognized as a means of biological control for their consumption of aphids? |
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Definition
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Term
why is density dependence desirable in biological control? |
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Definition
because it can help relationships be stable |
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Term
why it's important to consider which traits are valuable for effective natural enemies |
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Definition
because if we have solid notions about what attributes are important, then we can target specific traits in natural enemies that may be of most use |
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Term
why metapopulations are good for biological control |
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Definition
because they encourage stability |
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Term
why most parasitic wasp species are rarely seen |
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Definition
because they're <1/8 inch long |
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Term
why plant resistance is economical |
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Definition
it reduces labor and material costs associated with pest management of the target pest |
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Term
why synchrony in time and space occurs both within and across seasons |
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Definition
because natural enemies must re-unite with their host/prey resources after conditions have improved |
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Term
why the type of pest is important |
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Definition
because it helps in developing sampling approaches |
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Term
why we study population dynamics |
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Definition
to help predict pest outbreaks and to understand how to best implement control tactics like biological control |
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Term
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Definition
predatory earwig (Labidura riparia) |
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Term
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Definition
adult stage of Harmonia axyridis (Asian multi-colored ladybeetle) |
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Term
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Definition
larval stage of Harmonia axyridis (Asian multi-colored ladybeetle) |
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Term
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Definition
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