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Pests

 

Many gardeners automatically reach for chemical-based pesticides to kill pests. For the short term, these chemicals are effective. However, for the long-term ecological health of your garden, these agents are detrimental. Over time, they destroy not only the harmful insects and bacteria, but also the ones that are beneficial to the garden. This increases garden vulnerability. Pesticides often strip the soil of nutrients causing it to become unusable for planting. Another major concern of pesticide use is that it can contaminate surface water by washing into the Pacific Ocean. Pesticides may also percolate into groundwater thereby contaminating those water sources as well.

Integrated Pest Management System

Integrated pest management (IPM) is a pest management strategy that focuses on long-term prevention or suppression of pest problems with minimum impact on human health, the environment, and non-target organisms. Preferred pest management techniques include encouraging naturally occurring biological control, using alternate plant species or varieties that resist pests, selecting pesticides with a lower toxicity to humans or non-target organisms, adopting cultivation, pruning, fertilizing, or irrigation practices that reduce pest problems, and changing the habitat to make it incompatible with pest development. Pesticides are used as a last resort when careful monitoring indicates the need. When treatments are necessary, the least toxic and most target-specific pesticides are chosen. Consider the signal words on the label, persistence, impact on non-targets, and potential chronic human health effects. Check the pesticide label to make sure all precautions and legal requirements are being carefully adhered to, and verify that the person doing the application is certified, and qualified, to handle the equipment and the material chosen. Contractors differ in their skills and experience, and it is important to hire a company that is reliable and knowledgeable about IPM practices.

Include plants that attract beneficial insects in the garden.

Remember that IPM is a sensible and thoughtful approach to pest control, combining the use of physical, cultural, biological and chemical control methods to effectively manage pests with minimal risk to humans and the environment.

Preventative Measures

Select plant varieties resistant to diseases and pests that are prevalent in your area.
Include plants that are resistant to pests and ones that attract beneficial bugs and birds that eat the pests. You might consider Ceanothus, Lavenders, Sages, Tagetes, Echinacea, Encelia, and Yarrow will attract good insects like lacewings, lady beetles, mealy bug destroyers.
Plant carefully and follow up with proper watering, fertilizing, and garden cleanup.
Rotate crops to prevent the buildup of specific pests in a vegetable garden.
Check your plants frequently. Look for signs of infestation such as fungal growth, holes in leaves or fruit, sap oozing from bark, or wilted branches.
Check for insects hiding on leaf undersides, in bark fissures, or beneath fallen leaves.

Hands-on, non-toxic methods:

Remove and destroy slugs, snails, caterpillars, and other pests by hand. You may need to pluck and destroy entire leaves.
Prune and destroy branches infested with pest or disease.

 

A damaged leaf

 

You can trap pests with pheromone (chemical used by insects for attraction).

 

Biological Controls

Biological controls (beneficial insects) are living organisms used to destroy garden pests. This type of control occurs naturally in the garden all the time. To draw beneficial insects into your garden and encourage them to remain:

Bumble bee pollinating garden flowers

 

Provide food in the form of nectar-producing plants and avoid chemical sprays that will destroy useful creatures.
Purchase and release beneficial insects such as ladybugs and lacewings.
Create a naturally pest resistant garden

For IPM information, click the pest in question:

Use These pdfs instead - http://www.smgov.net/epd/residents/HHW/pest.htm - the pdfs are attached.

To learn more about IPM, contact:

UC IPM Online http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/WATER/U/index.html

Bio-Integral Resource Center http://www.birc.org/

Los Angeles County Vector Control (mosquito information) 800-825-3400 www.lawestvector.org

 

Los Angeles County West Vector Control (310) 915-7370

 

City of Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services (562) 570-4132

 

Chemical Controls

Keep in mind that the truly pest-free garden does not exist. At times, pesticides need to be used but should be considered only as a last resort. If you do use pesticides, you must be careful with its use and disposal:

Safe Disposal of Chemicals:

Los Angeles County Collection Events (800) 238-0173 or www.lacsd.org
City of Los Angeles -  S.A.F.E. Centers (888) 253-2652
City of Santa Monica  - Household Hazardous Waste Collection Center (310) 458-2213 or www.sustainablesm.org

 

Study Reading a Pesticide Label to learn how to read a pesticide label.
The signal words "CAUTION," "WARNING," and "DANGER" (in order of increasing toxicity) indicate the relative acute toxicity, or short-term effects, of the active ingredients to humans. They do not refer to long-term effects to humans nor do they indicate the effect on aquatic invertebrates.
Always dispose of pesticides, fungicides, and herbicides according to the product directions. Never pour pesticide down any type of drain, including a storm drain; it pollutes the water supply and harms our environment.