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The Secret to Finishing Strong: By Steve Farrar Pdf Free Download

  • bendownmewallcimer
  • Aug 12, 2023
  • 19 min read


This page contains Steve Farrar Books (EPUB). And they are all available for free downloads. HOW TO DOWNLOAD: Kindly click on the name of the eBook(s) you want to download and immediately, the download starts.


  • Progress 09/01/15 to 08/31/16OutputsTarget Audience:The target audiences for the Western IPM Center are Western state IPM programs; Western state IPM research and extension personnel; interest groups concerned with pest management and pesticide issues; agricultural commodity groups, growers and grower and ag-focused publications; urban pest management personnel; natural lands managers; and EPA, USDA, Federal Services and Western state agency personnel related to pest management and pesticide regulation. The other regional IPM Centers and national IPM community are also a target audience. The general public is also a target audience. The Western IPM Center provides integrated pest management information to Western state IPM programs, which then provide the information to the general public about how to practice integrated pest management. The Western IPM Center targets the general public to explain why to practice IPM - the benefits and impacts of integrated pest management. Changes/Problems:Nothing ReportedWhat opportunities for training and professional development has the project provided?In 2015, the Crop Pest Losses Signature program held two lettuce and three cotton workshops with 63 participants and offered 15 Arizona Department of Agriculture CEUs and 11 California Department of Pesticide Regulation CEUs and two Certified Crop Advisor CEUs. The cotton survey yielded 24 responses totaling 57,000 acres, representing about 65% of Arizona cotton acres and three responses representing California acres. The lettuce survey yielded 19 responses representing about 72% of the lettuce acreage in Yuma County, Arizona and Imperial County, California. The lettuce pest losses workshop was held in Salinas California with three Pest Control Advisors. The response to surveys there was of limited utility. The Ergot Alert newsletters were sent to 61 recipients in Central Oregon, 310 recipients in the Columbia Basin and 65 recipients in the Grande Ronde Valley of Northeast Oregon. Overall, the newsletter was rated moderately to highly useful, improved knowledge of ergot in 90% of respondents, helped 52% of respondents make fungicide application decisions in 2015, resulted in better ergot control (20% of respondents), and reduced fungicide applications (13% of respondents). "Ergot Research Round-Up". Dung J. OSU Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center Grass Seed Field Day. May 19, 2015. Hermiston, OR (100 attendees). "Developing New Tools to Manage Ergot in Grass Seed Crops". Dung J. Central Oregon Farm Fair and Trade Show. February 4, 2016. Madras, OR (75 attendees). "Developing New Tools to Manage Ergot in Grass Seed Crops". Dung J. Columbia Basin Grass Seed Growers Association. February 11, 2016. Hermiston, OR (25 attendees). Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Field day, Sheridan. Wyoming. 50 participants. Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Field day, Lingle. Wyoming. 75 participants. Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Multi-state conference (Wyoming, Colorado, and Nebraska producers) organized in conjunction with Colorado State University. Cheyenne, Wyoming. 75 participants. 03/02/2016 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Stink Bug Management in Cotton. Farm Home Ranch Day, Thatcher, AZ. 30 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU. 01/28/2016 Ellsworth, P.C., L.M. Brown, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. Field Crops Clinic, Casa Grande, AZ. 55 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU. 01/27/2016 Ellsworth, P.C., L.M. Brown, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. Field Crops Clinic, Buckeye, AZ. 25 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU. 01/26/2016 Ellsworth, P.C., L.M. Brown, P.C. Ellsworth, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. Field Crops Clinic, Marana, AZ. 15 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU. 12/10/2015 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth. Integrated Stink Bug Management: Costs and Benefits. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Parker, AZ. 7 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU, 0.6 CA CEUs. 12/09/2015 Brown, L.M. Integrated Stink Bug Management: Costs & Benefits. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Maricopa, AZ. 11 participants. 0.6 AZ CEU, 0.6 CA CEUs. 7/13/2015. Toews, M., P.C. Ellsworth, L.M. Brown. Discussion of Brown Stink Bug Ecology and Management Across the Agricultural Landscape. Blythe, CA. 10 participants. 04/01/2015 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth. Stink Bug Damage Dynamics and Their Management in Cotton. Spring Yuma County Agronomic Workshop, Yuma, AZ. 24 participants. 0.5 AZ CEU, 0.6 CA CEUs. 02/04/2015 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth. Stink Bug Research Update: Chemical Efficacy and Damage Dynamics. Field Crops Clinic, Avondale, AZ. 19 participants. 0.5 AZ CEU. 12/09/2015 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth. MAC Field Tour: Stink Bug Management and More. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Maricopa, AZ. 11 participants. 1 AZ CEU. 10/28/2015 Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth. Effects of Brown Stink Bug chemical control on costs and other pests. 5th Annual Central Arizona Farmer Field Day, Maricopa, AZ. 65 participants. 1 AZ CEU. 04/06/2016 Ellsworth P.C., L.M. Brown, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Potential Disruption of an Established IPM Program by the Brown Stink Bug. IPM of Agriculturally Important Heteroptera in the Western States, Honolulu, HI. 130 participants. How have the results been disseminated to communities of interest?The staff of the Western IPM Center communicates with Western state IPM programs; Western state IPM research and extension personnel; interest groups concerned with pest management and pesticide issues; agricultural commodity groups, growers and grower and ag-focused publications; urban pest management personnel; schools; natural lands managers; and EPA, USDA and the Federal Services personnel related to pest management and pesticide regulation, as well as to the other IPM Centers and the national IPM community. We communicate with the general public through our website and Twitter feed, and to Western IPM programs, which then provide information to the general public. Center communication occurs through multiple avenues, including oral and poster presentations at meeting, discussions during stakeholder and commodity meetings, conference calls, emails, and distribution of Center publications in electronic and print formats. The Center staff made oral or poster presentations at the Entomology Society of America Pacific Branch meeting, the Wheat Stem Sawfly Conference, the Pacific meeting of the American Phytopathology Society, the annual meeting of California League of Food Processors, the Southern IPM Center Advisory committee and the Montana Invasive Species Advisory Council regarding Western IPM Center programs and IPM successes. The three Comment Coordinators, Co-Director Ellsworth, and the Center staff participate in monthly conference calls with Western Region IR-4. The calls keep Center staff current with minor crops pesticide registration issues and facilitate IPM input into IR-4 priority setting. Given the importance of specialty crops in the Western Region, both the Center and Western Region IR-4 value this regular interaction. The Western IPM Center Comment Coordinators each have a network of stakeholders with which they communicate with regarding information requests on pesticide related issues in the Federal Register. The responses to federal requests for information contain specific feedback from multiple stakeholders. All responses to Request for Comment in the Federal Register are archived in a searchable database on the Center website -data-sources/information-request-replies/ The Western IPM Center communicates with communities of interest through our Advisory and Steering committees and by working in partnership with government agencies, private sector organizations, tribes, and academic institutions. Partnerships with these and other groups increase the Center's reach and help to promote wider adoption of sustainable IPM practices. The Center publishes monthly electronic newsletters which are distributed to our subscriber list and are freely available on our website ( -the-center/publications/newsletters/). The e-newsletter subscriber list is actively managed and currently has more than 1,500 subscribers. The Center also publishes one-page fliers focusing on specific aspects of the Western IPM Center program which are distributed electronically and printed versions are distributed at meetings. Information from the newsletters and other sources are interconnected to our blog ( ) and twitter (@IPMWest). In 2016, we also launched a YouTube Channel ( -jchC08KA) The Crop Pest Losses and Impact Assessment Signature Program disseminated results via presentations at Cooperative Extension meetings, workshops and field days; online through Vegetable IPM Updates and Field Crop IPM Shorts (ongoing advisories); in Extension publications; through Impact Statements published by the Arizona Pest Management Center and University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; to IPM experts and colleagues at professional meetings via posters and presentations. What do you plan to do during the next reporting period to accomplish the goals?IPM DEVELOPMENT AND ADOPTION We will issue an RFA for projects that advance IPM development and adoption. They will focus on early-stage concepts and later-stage outreach and implementation. Grants fulfill our goals and priorities. We will develop an outcome matrix to document how grants are furthering Center progress towards achieving its short-, medium- and long-term outcomes. INTRA-REGIONAL IPM COLLABORATION AND COOPERATION Our signature programs promote collaboration across multiple disciplines, states and territories. Our grant program identifies the importance of building multi-state collaborative teams to address IPM issues. We will collaborate with the regional technical committee of state IPM coordinators (WERA1017) to organize the CPPM PD Workshop in July 2016 as an opportunity for IPM research and extension scientists to collaborate. We will reach out to underserved populations in our region and promote intra-regional cooperation. INTER-REGIONAL IPM COLLABORATION AND COOPERATION The Center will continue our signature programs with outputs that can be applied in the other regions. We will continue collaborations with the other centers on their signature programs (i.e. NCIPMC's tribal nation program, NEIPMC's urban housing program, and SIPMC's IT program). We lead in weather-based decision support services and host the on-line Toolkit for Assessing IPM Outcomes and Impacts. We will develop the survey for best management practices for pollinators that can be used nationwide to inform the MP3 process. We will cooperate with the other centers on providing information about progress on the MP3 process. The Center and NCIPMC funded a Western pulse crop work group to collaborate with the NCIPMC pulse crop work group. The development of an SCRI grant to harmonize weather systems, a joint project of the Western and North Central weather work groups will be submitted in 2016. The four centers will continue to meet twice a year with Amanda Crump as lead Director for the next 2 years. She will organize monthly calls, lead the biannual meetings and facilitate the NIPMCC meeting. We will continue to participate in national school IPM meetings. IPM INFORMATION NETWORKS The Center will maintain information networks to provide regulatory agencies with the real-world pest management information they need to make science-based decisions. Our Comment Coordinators engage stakeholders in providing information to develop responses to information requests. We will participate in regional meetings, such as WERA1017, Western Association of Agricultural Experiment Station Directors, Western SARE, and Western Region IR-4 to maintain information networks with sibling programs. We will improve methods of sharing information with stakeholders through our newsletter, blog, website, email, and agricultural press. IPM PARTNERSHIPS The Center will partner with organizations within the West. The director will participate in the WR IR-4 SLR/CLR meetings, and presumably be on the Administrative Council of Western SARE. The WR IR-4 regional field coordinator, the Western Association of Agricultural Experiment Station Directors executive director and WPDN director continue to serve on our Advisory Committee. The new Western SARE Regional Coordinator will be invited to serve on the Advisory Committee. The Center and WR IR-4 Program have a long-standing partnership to address specialty crop pest management issues and have developed a set of criteria for evaluating the IPM compatibility of pesticides. Our staff will provide IPM-fit comments to WR IR-4 during their Priority Setting Process. We will maintain broad-based Advisory and Steering Committees to identify and prioritize Western IPM needs. We will participate in regional stakeholder meetings to identify opportunities for new partnerships. We will add new members to this group based on an evaluation of our progress towards completing our goals. Nationally, the director serves on the executive committee of the National IPM Coordinating Committee. IPM SIGNATURE FOOD SECURITY PROGRAMS 6.1. Regional Infrastructure for Climate and Weather-based Decision Support Tools This signature program advances IPM systems by providing access to quality-controlled climate and weather data for any state that wishes to partner. This program combines advanced, server-based tools and services with tailored education and outreach. State partners identify specific needs for data and services and these are delivered from the central system through the local partner's website. Services include the acquisition and ingestion of data from agricultural weather networks that are made available for integration within state-based systems; enterprise-level back-up for weather data; delivery of quality-controlled weather data from diverse networks encompassing a specified region; and additional access to research-level virtual weather station utilities. This program ensures that no state will lack the basic data needed to develop and deliver weather-based decision support tools and exploit the models and tools that already exist. Regional workshops describe this service and enable partners to advance their IPM-support capacities. 6.2. Crop Pest Losses and Impact Assessment One important goal of this signature program is to expand the Crop Pest Losses survey process to new crops and regions. We will promote the outcomes of the program, and our ability to document major impacts of IPM in cotton and lettuce, through presentations and discussions with representatives of different commodities in the West. One challenge is the investment of time and knowledge to modify the survey to a new crop in a way that captures the unique needs of an industry. We hope that continued work with Shimat Joseph, University of California Cooperative Extension (UCCE) IPM Advisor, to implement the Lettuce Pest Losses survey in 2016 will address this challenge. We are pursuing a table grape survey in California with Allison Ferry-Abee of UCCE. We have an active collaboration to develop alfalfa pest losses that will expand from Arizona to Utah and California via a funded Western IPM Center outreach and implementation grant. We will reach out to people in Cooperative Extension or industry and work with these groups to help them assess pest management issues and document impacts within their crops. In 2016, a University of Arizona MS student will develop techniques to assess the impact of cotton IPM in Arizona. She will use a new tool, Netway, developed at Cornell University to explore alternative evaluation strategies for the future. 6.3. Protocols for Responding to Invasive Species The program will assemble a group to develop a response plan for Ceratocystis wilt caused Ohia death in Hawaii. They will develop a plan, taking into account necessary leadership and participation, critical avenues of communication and appropriate messaging; rapid collection of available information from reliable sources, and implementation mechanisms. The group will hold a symposium and generate a white paper and collaborate on a grant proposal. EVALUATION OF IPM IMPLEMENTATION The Center will increase PD's knowledge of impact assessment methods so that they can plan and execute effective evaluations. This support is provided through the Toolkit for Assessing IPM Outcomes and Impacts. We will support the Toolkit and provide evaluation training. The Center includes impact evaluation as a priority in our grants. We will require that proposals include expected outputs, outcomes and impacts, and identify the evaluation objectives, measurement indicators, and specific methods to be used to evaluate the proposed outcomes. In addition, we require awardees to submit final reports that document the project's outputs and outcomes. We will develop an evaluation plan to assist with aligning Center activities with our overall goals. ImpactsWhat was accomplished under these goals?DEVELOPMENT AND ADOPTION OF IPM In response to the 2015 RFA, we received 29 proposals from 11 Western states requesting $769,609. A 5-person review panel recommended funding 11 projects: 2 work groups, 1 planning document, 5 project initiation, and 3 outreach projects. One special issues proposal was funded to date. Reports for completed projects and summaries for projects in progress are at projects.ipm.gov. Our funding supported livestock pest IPM (veterinaryentomology.ucr.edu/), increased grower awareness of parasitoids (projects.ipm.gov/ProjectDetails.cfm?project_ID=1459), and resulted in better ergot control and a reduction of fungicide applications (projects.ipm.gov/ProjectDetails.cfm?project_ID=1455). INTRA-REGIONAL IPM COLLABORATION Signature Programs promote intra-regional collaboration. One project initiation grant works with the Crop Pest Losses signature program. Our program funds multi-state/island/tribal projects with exceptions for pests or crops limited to one state. We attend, present updates and conduct meetings throughout the West. Our newsletter connects an intra- and inter-regional audience and includes information on possible collaborations, funding, meetings and online events. To fill a gap, we added Ken Kamiya to our Advisory Committee as a Pacific Island representative. INTER-REGIONAL IPM COLLABORATION The Center collaborates with other regional centers on databasing Crop Profiles and Pest Management Strategic Plans. Our director served on the Executive Board of the Integrated Pest Information Platform for Extension and Education project. We led the regional centers in-person and monthly phone meetings since October 2015. We worked with the Northeastern Center on arrangements for the National Forum on Climate and Pests. Center staff attended advisory committee meetings of the North Central and Southern IPM Centers and presented an update to the Southern advisory committee. INFORMATION NETWORKS Our three comment coordinators respond to requests for information in the Federal Register with on-the-ground information regulatory agencies need to make relevant, science-based decisions. Each coordinator engages a network of stakeholders to develop responses, which are archived in a searchable database. The Center publishes monthly e-newsletter delivered more than 1,500 subscribers with a trackable opens rate of 25 to 30%. We publishe a blog and Twitter feed. In response to Advisory Committee input, the Center communicator was increased to full-time in May 2016 and is expanding communications to include video and target a broader public. PARTNERSHIPS Western Region IR-4 and the Center have monthly calls on IPM fit criteria and documents for IR-4 project selection, and to coordinate responses to requests for information and other collaborations. Our director participates in the WR IR-4 State Liaison/Commodity Liaison meetings, and Becky Sisco, the Regional IR-4 Field Coordinator, is a member of the Center's Steering Committee. Western SARE is an important partner for the Center. Until recent leadership changes at the Center and Western SARE, the directors of both served on each other's boards. We partner with the National and the Western Plant Diagnostic Networks and participated in the meeting of the National Plant Diagnostic Network in March. Rick Bostock, Director of the WPDN, is a member of the Center's Advisory Committee. The Center presented at the Western Association of Agricultural Experiment Directors meeting and its executive director, Michael Harrington, serves on the Center's Steering Committee. OBJ 6: SIGNATURE PROGRAMS Regional Infrastructure for Climate and Weather-based Decision Support Tools The Climate and Weather-based Decision Support Tools Signature Project established Web-based tools that bring together U.S. weather data and plant pest and disease models to serve many decision support needs in agriculture ( ). The system provides daily and hourly weather-driven models serving IPM, regulatory and plant biosecurity uses nationally, and specializes in IPM needs for the West. The websitemarked its 20-year anniversary in April 2016. New features added to the extended forecasting functionality including the 10-year average station data adjusted using climatologically aided interpolation and a seasonal climate forecast that uses NOAA's North American Multi-Model Ensemble forecast system that generates predictions for up to seven months. These tools are useful alternatives to 30-year historical average weather data. New models have been added to CROPTIME including cucumber, broccoli, hairy nightshade, redroot pigweed and lambsquarter. The Asian citrus psyllid model was changed to include a biofix based on user-input to match the known biology of the psyllid. New models were added for Japanese pine sawyer beetle and pine tree lappet moth. At the end of 2015, the website has run more than 388,696 degree-day model runs and approximately 310,000 hourly-driven model runs since project inception. The site now has over 27,000 public weather stations linked to over 127 different pest and crop models. Web hosting was moved to a server that has 5 times the capacity and processes models in one-half the time because of traffic levels. 2. Crop Pest Losses and Impact Assessment Program The program conducted 5 Crop Pest Losses workshops, 2 for lettuce and 3 for cotton, with 63 participants. The cotton survey had 24 responses representing 57,000 acres and 65% of Arizona cotton acres, a record. Three responses represented California acres. In one county, 100% of acres were surveyed. Response rates for the 2015 lettuce survey for Arizona and portions of California were strong. We held the first Lettuce Pest Losses workshop in Salinas, California. Three PCAs attended the meeting, and although this first attempt did not yield a good response, we will follow up in 2016. Information from Crop Pest Losses surveys were used to document economic and environmental impacts of Arizona cotton and lettuce industries, used by the President of the Univ. Arizona in letters to the Arizona Congressional Delegation and used for a display and white paper for presentation in Congressman Gosar's office in Washington, D.C. The Signature Program has successfully worked with students and leveraged Center money. Students prepared theses and publications on the adoption of new technologies in cotton IPM systems of the desert Southwest. Crop Pest Losses data led to a successful USDA-ARDP grant to develop chemical-use maps to support and inform whitefly insecticide-use decisions based on pesticide use patterns and probabilities of resistance development, and a grant from Monsanto Insect Knowledge Management Program to expand the activities of the Crop Pest Losses program. 3. Protocols for Responding to Invasive Species in the West The program sponsored the CLIMEX software training in March 2016 at the Western Society of Weed Science meeting in Albuquerque NM. CLIMEX ( -DYMEX/Editions) is simulation and modeling software to predict the effect of climate on species distribution and estimates the likelihood of invasive species movement and geographic distribution changes. EVALUATION AND IPM IMPLEMENTATION The Center uses evaluation plans as criteria for funding and project report forms were updated so each project director is supplied with individualized expected outcomes. We are developing a survey to Western commodity groups to determine if producers and consultants associate IPM with conservation of ecological services (including pollination). A second survey will ask about best management practices used in specialty crops in the West. We synthesized and reported on IPM improvements in hops. Our director is a member of the basecamp discussion thread of program evaluation. PublicationsType:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Ellsworth P, Fournier A, Vandervoet T, Naranjo S. The Arizona Whitefly IPM Model: Cooperative Extension as Key to Translating and Transforming the Mexican Cotton System. 2/18/2016 2nd International Whitefly Symposium, Arusha, Tanzania, Africa.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Brown, L.M., P.C. Ellsworth, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Stink Bug Management in Cotton. 03/02/2016. Farm Home Ranch Day, Thatcher, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Baur, M. Funding opportunities in 2016 & 2017. 2016 International Wheat Stem Sawfly Conference, 15-16 March, 2016, Ft Collins, CO.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Baur, M. Western IPM Center Update. 2016 WAAESD/WEDA/WRPLC joint meeting in Santa Fe, NM, March 29-31, 2016. Available at:

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Baur ME, Tarutani C, Murray K, Fournier A, Farrar JJ, Elliott SF. Pest Management Strategic Plans: Document Stakeholder Needs and Generate Funding. Pacific Branch Entomology Society Meeting, Honolulu HI, April 3-6, 2016.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Ellsworth PC, Brown LM, Naranjo SE, Toews M, Frisvold GB. Potential Disruption of an Established IPM Program by the Brown Stink Bug. 04/06/2016. Honolulu, HI.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Elliott, SF. Montana Invasive Species Stakeholder Listening Sessions. Montana Invasive Species Advisory Council. May 24, 2016. Helena, MT.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2014Citation:Anonymous. 2014. Research-Based Integrated Pest Management IPM Programs Impact People Communities and the Economy of Arizona. University of Arizona Arizona Pest Management Center. -4_4-29-14.pdf.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Baur M. Tolerance revocations: Chlorpyrifos. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Farrar J. Label language for Malathion rice and watercress. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Farrar J. Proposal to mitigate exposure to bees from acutely toxic pesticide products. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Farrar J. Sulfoxaflor use patterns. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Fournier A, Ellsworth P. Proposal to mitigate exposure to bees from acutely toxic pesticide products. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Kawate M, Tarutani C. Proposal to mitigate exposure to bees from acutely toxic pesticide products. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Kawate M, Tarutani C. Sulfoxaflor use patterns. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Murray K. Sulfoxaflor use patterns. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Tarutani C. Label language for Malathion rice and watercress. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. The Western Front e-newsletter, August, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. The Western Front e-newsletter, September, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. The Western Front e-newsletter, October, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. The Western Front e-newsletter, November, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. The Western Front e-newsletter, December, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 13 May, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 21 May, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 28 May, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 4 June, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 11 June, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 18 June, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:The 2015 Ergot Alert Newsletter, 2 July, oregonstate.edu/dept/coarc/ergot-alert-newsletter, oregonstate.edu/dept/hermiston/ergot-alert-newsletter, extension.oregonstate.edu/union/Pest%20Alerts.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Farrar JJ, Baur ME, Murray K, Elliott S. Integrated Pest Management Improvements in Hops from 2008 to 2015. -the-center/publications/special-reports/ipm-improvements-in-hops-pdf/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation: 2016. Ellsworth P, Fournier A, Dixon W, Rock C. Tolerance revocations: Chlorpyrifos. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Garvey K. 2016. Webinar Set Feb. 26 on Grapevine Red Blotch and Associated Virus: What You Need to Know. UCANR blog, 17 February 2016. Available at: =20230.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Kawate M, Tarutani C. Tolerance revocations: Chlorpyrifos. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. Murray K. Tolerance revocations: Chlorpyrifos. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. Fournier A, Ellsworth PC, Dixon W. Imidacloprid pollinator risk assessment. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, January, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, February, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, March, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, April, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, May, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. The Western Front e-newsletter, June, westernipm.org/index.cfm/about-the-center/publications/.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. UCANR blog announces the silver award by the ACE (Association for Communication Excellence in Agriculture, Natural Resources and Life and Human Sciences) for the monthly Western IPM Center's electronic newsletter, The Western Front. =20760

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. Special Announcement for the appointment of Amanda Crump as new Center Director.

  • Type:OtherStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:2016. Tarutani C. Comments in Response to Paraquat Dichloride Proposed Interim Mitigation Decision. westernipm.org/index.cfm/searchable-data-sources/information-request-replies/.

  • Type:WebsitesStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:2015. Ellsworth P, Dixon W, Fournier A, Palumbo J, Pier N. 2015. Chemical Use Maps for Resistance Management. University of Arizona Cooperative Extension. resistance.cals.arizona.edu

  • Type:BooksStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:ONeal S, Walsh DB, Gent DH. 2015. Field Guide for Integrated Pest Management in Hops. 3rd Ed. Pullman, WA: US Hop Industry Plant Protection Committee. Available at

  • Type:Journal ArticlesStatus:Under ReviewYear Published:2016Citation:Farrar JJ, Baur ME, Elliott SF. 2016. Impacts of IPM in agriculture in the Western United States. Issues section of the Journal of Integrated Pest Management.

  • Type:Journal ArticlesStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Farrar JJ, Baur ME, Elliott SF. 2016. Adoption of IPM Practices in Grape, Tree Fruit, and Nut Production in the Western United States. Journal of Integrated Pest Management 2016 7 (1): 8. doi: 10.1093/jipm/pmw007.

  • Type:Journal ArticlesStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Naranjo S, Ellsworth P, Frisvold G. 2015. Economic Value of Biological Control in Integrated Pest Management of Managed Plant Systems. Annual Review of Entomology. Vol. 60 No. 32, 132. doi: 10.1146/annurev-ento-010814-021005 -ento-010814-021005.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Benander M, Jabbour R. 2015. Local and landscape effects on parasitism of alfalfa weevil by a specialist parasitoid wasp. Oral presentation at Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Baltimore, MD. August.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Field day, Sheridan, Wyoming.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Field day, Lingle, Wyoming.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Biological Insect Control in Alfalfa Hay and Seed Crops. Jabbour R. 2015. Multi-state conference (Wyoming, Colorado, and Nebraska producers) organized in conjunction with Colorado State University. Cheyenne, Wyoming

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Documenting Impacts of University of Arizona IPM Programs. Fournier A. Association of Applied IPM Ecologists (AAIE) in Napa, CA on Feb 2, 2015.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. Stink Bug Research Update: Chemical Efficacy and Damage Dynamics. 02/04/2015. Field Crops Clinic, Avondale, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. Stink Bug Research Update: Chemical Efficacy and Damage Dynamics. 02/04/2015. Field Crops Clinic, Avondale, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. Stink Bug Damage Dynamics and Their Management in Cotton. 04/01/2015. Spring Yuma County Agronomic Workshop, Yuma, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Ergot Research Round-Up. Dung J. OSU Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center Grass Seed Field Day. May 19, 2015. Hermiston, OR.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Toews M, Ellsworth PC, Brown LM. Discussion of Brown Stink Bug Ecology and Management Across the Agricultural Landscape. 7/13/2015. Blythe, CA.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM. Integrated Stink Bug Management: Costs & Benefits. 12/09/2015. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Maricopa, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. Integrated Stink Bug Management: Costs and Benefits. 12/10/2015. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Parker, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. Brown L. 01/26/2016. Field Crops Clinic, Marana, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Farrar JJ, Baur ME, Elliot S. Adoption of IPM practices for disease management in the West. American Phytopathology Society Pacific meeting. 08/04/2015. Anaheim, CA.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. Effects of Brown Stink Bug chemical control on costs and other pests. 10/28/2015. 5th Annual Central Arizona Farmer Field Day, Maricopa, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2015Citation:Brown LM, Ellsworth PC. MAC Field Tour: Stink Bug Management and More. 12/09/2015. Cotton Pest Losses Workshop, Maricopa, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Ellsworth, P.C., L.M. Brown, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. 01/27/2016. Field Crops Clinic, Buckeye, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Ellsworth, P.C., L.M. Brown, S.E. Naranjo, M. Toews, G.B. Frisvold. Integrated Insect Management in Cotton: Costs and Benefits of Attempting Stink Bug Control. 01/28/2016. Field Crops Clinic, Casa Grande, AZ.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Developing New Tools to Manage Ergot in Grass Seed Crops. Dung J. Central Oregon Farm Fair and Trade Show. February 4, 2016. Madras, OR.

  • Type:Conference Papers and PresentationsStatus:PublishedYear Published:2016Citation:Developing New Tools to Manage Ergot in Grass Seed Crops. Dung J. Columbia Basin Grass Seed Growers Association. February 11, 2016. Hermiston, OR.





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