Buhle Nkomo
Tobacco is susceptible to a number of pests that can cause serious damage to roots, lower yield, reduce leaf quality, in some instances transmit tobacco diseases and ultimately decrease revenue.
The Tobacco Industry & Marketing Board (TIMB) encourages the implementation of practices such as the Integrated Pest Management by the tobacco farming community with a view to enhancing quality, yield and revenue while managing costs by particularly reducing unnecessary pesticide or insecticide applications.
Integrated Pest Management can be defined as a combination of systematic biological, chemical and cultural ways of controlling pests. The thrust of Integrated Pest Management is the use of suitable environment friendly and cheaper methods of lowering pest levels in crop production.
The Integrated Pest Management is premeditated to help tobacco farmers protect their crops from pests at the lowest possible costs.
The Integrated Pest Management system which should have three aspects and the most important one being field scouting, a regular and systematic checking of the crop designed to detect the occurrence and concentration of pests.
Suitable
scouting entails examining crops repetitively and on a weekly basis with an aim
to collect pest samples for proper identification in order to come up with
precise pest control methods.
It is ideal that pests build to
relatively large numbers to be chemically controlled for example if there a
more than 10 bud-worms per 100 plants, an insecticide can be applied but if it’s
not the case bud -worms can be controlled by hand picking as spraying a small
number might lead to pest developing resistance.
If an insecticide is necessary,
farmers should choose the most likely to target the pest and not harm
beneficial insects. If need be, systemic
insecticides can be applied to the soil and taken up by the plant to control
leaf-feeding insects, however farmers should consult the Tobacco Research Board
(TRB) or AGRITEX officers for guidance.
There are other types of control
measures that may be taken against insects in tobacco production and these
include biological and cultural control methods.
Biological
control method is the use of a living organism to control another living
organism. This includes nematodes, pathogens, predators, and parasites thus naturally
occurring predators and parasites comprise biological control agents.
These
organisms can contribute a lot in controlling pests. For example, as a group,
parasitic wasps, predatory stilt bugs, and other beneficial insects can kill 80
to 90 percent of bud-worms and horn-worms in a field.
Several
cultural practices can help reduce insect infestations and decrease the need
for insecticide applications. The
following cultural practices aid in the management of insect pests in tobacco
farming.Early land preparation can help in controlling pests. Ploughing at least four weeks before transplanting reduces cutworm infestations and may aid in wire-worm control.
Destruction
of seedbed transplants as soon as practical after transplanting is completed is
important as this practice keeps aphids and other insects from developing high
populations on the transplants and migrating to nearby tobacco fields.
Another cultural way is the management of
field borders to reduce insect habitat. Farmers
should keep field margins clear of weeds and tall grass to reduce feeding,
breeding, and over wintering sites for grasshoppers and other insects that move
from these sites into tobacco.It can never be overstated that good agronomic practices in pest control are key to successful growing of a clean and heavier bodied crop leading to greater revenue due to higher quality of the leaf.
For
additional Information contact
TIMB on telephone numbers 08677004624/6 or 0772145166/9 or 0279-22082/21982 or 025-3439 or 067-24268/29246 or 0277-2700 or 064-7280 or 0271-6772 or Toll Free
Numbers 08006003 / 0731999999 / 0712832804
TIMB on telephone numbers 08677004624/6 or 0772145166/9 or 0279-22082/21982 or 025-3439 or 067-24268/29246 or 0277-2700 or 064-7280 or 0271-6772 or Toll Free
Numbers 08006003 / 0731999999 / 0712832804
or
E-mail: info@timb.co.zw
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