Integrated Pest Management Plan - United States Department Of Agriculture Page 2

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Integrated Pest Management Plan
State/County:
Date Plan Submitted:
Producer/Owner:
Technical Service Provider:
A Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Plan is an ecosystem-based strategy that is a
sustainable approach to manage pests using a combination of techniques such as chemical
tools, biological control, habitat manipulation and modification of cultural practices and use of
resistant varieties.
Technical Guidance, Criteria, and Content for the IPM Plan is found at the URL: eDirectives
Navigate to: General Manual Title 190 Ecological
Sciences, Part 404 – Pest Management. Also Agronomy Technical Note #5: Pest
Management in the Conservation Planning Process in Technical Notes, Title 190 Ecological
Sciences-Agronomy-Technical Notes #5. Additional information can be found in NRCS State
Field Office Technical Guide (FOTG)
Select a state/County, go to Section IV, Conservation Practices, Integrated Pest
Management (595).
Minimum components of a Integrated Pest Management Plan shall include:
1.
Background and site information
a. Name of owner/operator and farm location (physical) and mailing address;
b. Soil map and soil map units description using Web Soil Survey
as a minimum printout.
Resource evaluations and mitigation process for soil, water, air and plant quality as
2.
related to suppression tactics that are being applied to the treated site.
a. Planned conservation practices and IPM technique to mitigate potential environmental
risk not to degrade soil, water, air and plant quality as related to suppression tactics
being applied to manage the pest;
b. Other practices to address soil, water, air, plant quality and other resource concerns.
Site specific assessment of environmental risks associated with existing and
3.
alternative pest management system. This element provides a brief description
and maps including:
a. Digital Conservation Plan Map with stream, surface waters, surface drainage and
wetlands on or adjacent to site, setbacks, property lines, field boundaries, field
name/number/acres and land use, map scale, structural practices, legend, and grower
name/county/state;
b. Field locations of planned areas;
c. Soil type and characteristics; note potential for runoff or permeability;
d. Site conditions risk description;
e. Window Pesticide Screening Tool (WIN-PST) Soil/Pesticide Interaction Hazard Report;
f.
Identification of pests, crop, plant community condition and degree of infestation;
g. Irrigation system and management (where appropriate);
h. Locations of sensitive resource areas identified on the plan map to include: Streams,
drains, surface waters, wetlands, wells, groundwater, drains, grassed waterways and
existing buffer practices;
i.
Sensitive wildlife habitat (on and off-site), food plots;
j.
Potential off-target drift areas;
k. Identification of beneficial predators and parasites;
Integrated Pest Management Plan Checklist – Code 114
January, 2012

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