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Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

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n. Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM. Introduction. Physical controls are methods that physically keep insect pests from reaching their hosts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM n Introduction Physical controls are methods that physically keep insect pests from reaching their hosts. Barriers include window screens for keeping health and nuisance pests out of buildings and plant pests out of greenhouses, floating row covers for many horticultural crops, and plant collars to keep cutworms from attacking plants such as tomatoes. Various types of traps can be used for control, such as yellow sticky traps in aphids. Next
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Page 1: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPMn

Introduction

Physical controls are methods that physically keep insect pests from reaching their hosts.

Barriers include window screens for keeping health and nuisance pests out of buildings and plant pests out of greenhouses, floating row covers for many horticultural crops, and plant collars to keep cutworms from attacking plants such as tomatoes.

Various types of traps can be used for control, such as yellow sticky traps in aphids.

Next

Page 2: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Mechanical measures for controlling insect pests involve manual operations and use of force with or without the aid of special equipment, while physical methods either affect such organisms physically or alter their physical environment.

Sometimes the most efficient way to kill insects is to stomp on them, literally or figuratively.

Physical and mechanical control methods can be as simple as handpicking or using a fly swatter and window screens to keep home free of flying insects.

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Page 3: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Mechanical measures for controlling insect pests involve manual operations and use of force with or without the aid of special equipment, while physical methods either affect such organisms physically or alter their physical environment.

Sometimes the most efficient way to kill insects is to stomp on them, literally or figuratively.

Physical and mechanical control methods can be as simple as handpicking or using a fly swatter and window screens to keep home free of flying insects.

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Page 4: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Cultivation or tillage exposes many soil insects to desiccation or predation by birds.

Hand-picking can be used for large or brightly colored foliage feeders. Shaking plants will dislodge many pests and collecting them on a white sheet as they fall out of the plants. A strong spray of water will dislodge aphids and mites from greenhouse, garden, and house plants.

These methods aim to reduce pest populations by using devises which affect them physically or alter their physical environment.

Barriers include floating row covers vegetable crops, and plant collars to keep cutworms from attacking plants such as tomatoes.

Rain or over-head irrigation can reduce thrips, aphid and mite, etc. populations in vegetables.

Frequent watering needs to occur (3-4 times/week) and the watering needs to be heavy enough to soak the ground around vegetable plants to be effective.

Use 100 mesh nylon net to avoid entry of whitefly into the nursery in the beginning. Install yellow water pan/sticky traps @ 10 per ha for monitoring for whitefly

Physical control

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Page 5: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

This method does not involve any artefact to kill pests from reaching the host except the use of manual labour.

Control by mechanical measures are generally resorted to when the areas involved are small and no other easier and economic measure is known.

These measures are also useful in cases where pests are to be contained in the incipient stage.

Mechanical control consists of methods and devices that kill or capture pests.

Mechanical control

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Page 6: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

The various methods used in tomato Integrated Pest Management

Page 7: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Pheromone traps

Place pheromone traps at a distance of 3 meters.

To make your own traps, make 10-12 holes into an old plastic bottle or 3 holes on each side of a used 1 liter ice cream container to allow moths to enter.

Place a wire to suspend the bait. Half-fill the container with soapy water. Hang the pheromone capsule using a string or wire.

Attach the trap to a stake or hang it on branch of a tree.

Helicoverpa armigera

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Page 8: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Traps should be installed in the field in such a way that the position of lure is always 6-12” above the crop canopy.

Replace the lures once in 15-25 days depending upon the weather conditions.

The trapped moths should be collected and killed daily. ETL for fruit borer is 8 to 10 moths per day per trap.

Set up pheromone traps @ 12/ha. Collection and destruction of damaged fruits and grown up caterpillars.

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Page 9: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Handpick damaged fruits and collect those that fall down.

Destroy the damaged fruits by cutting into small pieces or place them in sealed sacks and dry under the sun.

Putting them immediately in compost pit or burying them will enable the matured larvae to pupate into the soil.

Handpicking

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Page 10: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Protective collars

Protective collars made of plastic or paper cups, plastic drink bottles with ripped-out bottom, sturdy cardboard, and milk cartons.

Place the collar around the young plant and push into the soil to prevent the cutworm from attacking the stem.

Sticky substances Molasses, saw dusts, or crushed eggshells placed around the base of each plant as traps.

When cutworm emerges to feed, it will come in contact with the trap, get stuck, harden, and die.

Spodoptera litura

Page 11: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Collection and distribution of egg masses, larvae to Tobbacco cutworm/leaf eating caterpillar and tomato fruit borer.

Regular destruction of damaged fruits at each harvest. Plough the soil to expose and kill the pupae.

Flood the field to drive out hibernating larvae. Set up light trap at 1/ha or pheromone trap at 15/ha with pheroclin SL lure. Destroy egg masses and grown up larvae.

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Page 12: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Set up yellow pan water trap/sticky traps for monitoring whitefly, thrips etc. @ 10 traps per ha.

Locally available empty tins can be painted yellow/coated with grease/Vaseline/castor oil on outer surface may also be used as yellow sticky trap.

Aphid, whitefly and leaf hopper

Yellow Pan Water trap/Sticky Traps

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Page 13: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Yellow basin trap Half-fill yellow pan or basin with soapy water.

Place the pan close to the plant but exposed enough so that aphids will see it.

Use row covers to prevent the seedlings from the early attack of the pest.

Uproot and destroy the diseased leaf curl plants. Remove alternate weed hosts.

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Page 14: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Kitchen funnel

Inverted kitchen funnel capped with a plastic vial to monitor adults' emergence .

Plastic trays

Place the trays under the plants to monitor and catch pupating larvae as they leave the plants to pupate in the soil.

Yellow plastic gallon containers Mount containers upside down on sticks coated with transparent automobile grease or used motor oil.

These should be placed in and around the field at about 10 cm above the foliage. Clean and re-oil when traps are covered with flies.

Leaf miner

Inverted funnel method

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Page 15: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Yellow plastic drinking cups

Coat cups with adhesive (used motor oil) and stapled on stakes above plant canopies to trap flies.

Yellow plastic trapping sheets

A 2 m long x 75 cm wide yellow plastic sheet coated with motor oil, both ends attached to bamboo or wooden poles and carried by 2 persons through the field to mass capture adult flies.

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Page 16: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Spider mites

Hosing with a strong jet of water knocks off mites and destroys their webs.

Be sure to include the underneath of the leaves.

Apply water to pathways and other dusty areas at regular intervals

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Page 17: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

ThripsCollect and destroy the damaged

leaves and twigs and uproot the diseased plants.

Use yellow sticky traps at 15/ha to attract and kill insects.

Bright blue or royal blue sticky board traps

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Page 18: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

Summary•Physical controls are methods that physically keep insect pests from reaching their hosts.

•Mechanical measures for controlling insect pests involve manual operations and use of force with or without the aid of special equipment.

•Cultivation or tillage exposes many soil insects to desiccation or predation by birds.

•Hand-picking can be used for large or brightly colored foliage feeders.

•Shaking plants will dislodge many pests and collecting them on a white sheet as they fall out of the plants.

•A strong spray of water will dislodge aphids and mites from greenhouse, garden, and house plants.

•Use 100 mesh nylon net to avoid entry of whitefly into the nursery in the beginning. Install yellow water pan/sticky traps @ 10 per ha for monitoring for whitefly

•Mechanical control consists of methods and devices that kill or capture pests.End Previous Next

Page 19: Physical and Mechanical practices in Tomato IPM

•To monitor, Helicoverpa armigera place 2-3 traps in a hectare field area and for mass trapping set up pheromone traps @ 12/ha

•Protective collars made of plastic or paper cups, plastic drink bottles with ripped-out bottom, sturdy cardboard, and milk cartons.

•Place the collar around the young plant and push into the soil to prevent the cutworm from attacking the stem.

•Set up yellow pan water trap/sticky traps for monitoring whitefly, thrips etc. @ 10 traps per ha.

•Inverted kitchen funnel capped with a plastic vial to monitor leaf miner adults' emergence Plastic trays

•Bright blue or royal blue sticky board traps are used for Thrips

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