100% found this document useful (2 votes)
491 views1 page

Physical Control PDF

Physical methods of pest management involve manipulating the environment to control pests without chemicals. This includes using temperature, moisture, light, air, irradiation, greasing materials, and abrasive dusts. Some examples are sun drying seeds to kill eggs; hot water treatment of seeds; flooding fields to control cutworms; using carbon dioxide to asphyxiate stored product pests; and treating grains with oils or abrasive dusts like red earth or activated clay to damage insect exoskeletons. The goal is to modify the environment in ways that eliminate or prevent pest infestations through physical rather than chemical means.

Uploaded by

Dr Vijay Laxmi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
491 views1 page

Physical Control PDF

Physical methods of pest management involve manipulating the environment to control pests without chemicals. This includes using temperature, moisture, light, air, irradiation, greasing materials, and abrasive dusts. Some examples are sun drying seeds to kill eggs; hot water treatment of seeds; flooding fields to control cutworms; using carbon dioxide to asphyxiate stored product pests; and treating grains with oils or abrasive dusts like red earth or activated clay to damage insect exoskeletons. The goal is to modify the environment in ways that eliminate or prevent pest infestations through physical rather than chemical means.

Uploaded by

Dr Vijay Laxmi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

PHYSICAL METHODS OF PEST MANAGEMENT

Modification of physical factors in the environment to minimise or prevent pest


problems and use of physical forces like temperature, moisture, etc. in managing the insect
pests is known as physical control.

A. Manipulation of temperature
1. Sun drying the seeds to kill the eggs of stored product pests.
2. Hot water treatment of paddy seeds (50 - 55oC for 15 min) against rice white tip nematode.
3. Use of Flame throwers against locusts.
4. Use of burning torch against hairy caterpillars.
5. Cold storage of fruits and vegetables to kill fruit flies (1 - 2oC for 12 - 20 days).

B. Manipulation of moisture
1. Alternate drying and wetting rice fields against BPH.
2. Drying seeds (below 10% moisture level) affects insect development.
3. Flooding the field for the control of cutworms.

C. Manipulation of light
1. Treatment of storage grains using IR light to kill all stages of insects using Infra-red seed
treatment unit
2. Providing light in storage godowns as the lighting reduces the fertility of Indian meal moth
3. Light trapping.

D. Manipulation of air
1. Increasing the CO2 concentration in controlled atmosphere of stored grains to cause
asphyxiation in stored product pests.

E. Use of irradiation
Gamma irradiation from Co 60 is used to sterilize the insects in laboratory which compete
with the fertile males for mating when released in natural condition. Eg: Cattle screw worm
fly, Cochliomyia hominivorax control in Curacao Island by E.F.Knipling using this technique

F. Use of greasing material


Treating the stored grains particularly pulses with vegetable oils to prevent the oviposition and
the egg hatching. eg., bruchid adults.

H. Use of Abrasive dusts


1. Red earth treatment to red gram: Injury to the insect wax layer.
2. Activated clay: Injury to the wax layer resulting in loss of moisture leading to death. It is
used against stored product pests.
3. Drie-Die: This is a porous finely divided silica gel used against storage insects.

You might also like