Elements of Organic Farming
George Kuepper & Kate Atchley
Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture
Pest Insect,
& Disease
Management
OKBFRP Horticulture Program, July 2013
Regarding Weeds
Pest Insects & Diseases
Well-designed organic systems have
higher ecological stability and lower
pest pressure overall. “1000 tiny
hammers”
Organic System Effects On Pests
• Systemic Practices:
rotation, cover cropping, organic fertilization, adapted and
resistant cultivars, composting and basic sanitation
practices. “Nurturing the soil food web plus…”
• Systemic Effects:
innate and induced resistance/tolerance
biocontrol of pests and diseases in the soil
biocontrol of above ground pests
life cycles of weeds and pests disrupted
weed seedbank reduced
beneficial shift in weed populations
Putting It Together:
Setting the Foundation
B i o l o g i c a l l y H e a l t h y S o i l
A S o u n d O r g a n i c S y s t e m
R o t a t i o n s , C o v e r C ro p s
C o m p o s t , M a n u re
O r g a n i c C u l t u r a l P r a c t i c e s
O f f - F a r m I n p u t s
F e r t i l i z e r s — P e s t i c i d e s
G o o d
O r g a n i c
C ro p
Well-designed organic systems have
higher ecological stability and lower pest
pressure overall.
However, many pests require
additional management (i.e. cultural
practices) to ensure that they don’t
get out of control. “More tiny
hammers…”
Regarding Weeds
Pest Insects & Diseases
Traditional Organic Pest Control Practices
Weeds
cultivation
organic mulches
mowing
grazing
weeder geese
handweeding
flame weeding
plastic mulch
Insects & Disease
beneficial habitats
augmentation of
beneficials
physical barriers
nonsynthetic lures, traps,
repellents
adjusting timing
trap crops
Hand-picking
Putting It Together:
Second Level of Mgt.
B i o l o g i c a l l y H e a l t h y S o i l
A S o u n d O r g a n i c S y s t e m
R o t a t i o n s , C o v e r C ro p s
C o m p o s t , M a n u re
O r g a n i c C u l t u r a l P r a c t i c e s
O f f - F a r m I n p u t s
F e r t i l i z e r s — P e s t i c i d e s
G o o d
O r g a n i c
C ro p
Well-designed organic systems have
higher ecological stability and lower pest
pressure overall.
However, many pests require additional
management (i.e. cultural practices) to
ensure that they don’t get out of control.
While organic management
precludes most pesticides, many
allowable materials are available.
Regarding Weeds
Pest Insects & Diseases
Organic-Allowed Pesticides
(Insecticides, Miticides, Fungicides, Herbicides, etc.)
Mineral-based
Coppers
Sulfur
DE
Baking soda
Biologicals
Bt (Dipel®, etc.)
B. bassiana (Mycotrol®, etc.)
Bacillus subtilis (Serenade®, etc.)
Spinosad (Fire Ant bait, etc.)
Botanicals
Pyrethrum (Pyganic®, etc.)
Neem (Bioneem®, neem oil, etc.)
Garlic
Refined oils
Dormant oil
Superior oil
Soaps
Insecticidal soap
Herbicidal soap
Putting It Together:
Third Level of Mgt.
B i o l o g i c a l l y H e a l t h y S o i l
A S o u n d O r g a n i c S y s t e m
R o t a t i o n s , C o v e r C ro p s
C o m p o s t , M a n u re
O r g a n i c C u l t u r a l P r a c t i c e s
O f f - F a r m I n p u t s
P e s t i c i d e s
G o o d
O r g a n i c
C ro p
Organic Strategy For Weed & Pest
Management
I. Organic System Effects
II. Traditional Organic Practices
III. Allowed Pesticides
Integrated Pest Management
(IPM)
IPM is a systematic strategy for
managing pests which considers
prevention, avoidance, monitoring and
suppression. Where chemical pesticides
are necessary, a preference is given to
materials and methods which maximize
public safety and reduce
environmental risk.
MASSACHUSETTS IPM COUNCIL'S
DEFINITION OF IPM
http://massnrc.org/ipm/what-is-ipm.html
Reality Check!
• Some diseases are wind-borne or carried
by mobile insect vectors. Rotation has
little-to-no effect on such diseases.
Asters yellows, on
Black-eyed susan.
Vectored by leaf-
hoppers.