Posters
Congratulations to the Student Poster Award Winners!
2nd Place:
P84: Factors impacting soybean disease management decisions in Nebraska | Asha G. Mane, Department of Plant Pathology, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Lincoln, NE
Honorable Mention:
P33: Establishing the mating disruption mechanism for San Jose scale in apples | Jessika Maas, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI
P35: Multi-cultivar grafting: Evaluating a novel low-cost, grower-friendly approach to monitor key apple pests | Prabina Regmi, Stockbridge School of Agriculture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA
P72: Integrated herbicide-resistant weed management practices: Current and future technologies | Mandeep Singh, Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Lincoln, NE
Authors should send their poster as a PDF file to Leah McSherry. More will be added here as we receive them.
P1: A fresh perspective: Sysco's data-driven sustainability expansion
P2: Sustainable supply chains: Building a better apple at Honeybear Brands
P3: Online integrated pest management extension programming during the COVID-19 pandemic in South Carolina
P4: Evaluation of IPM online courses
P5: Lessons learned from three years of organizing and facilitating IPM webinars
P6: UC IPM diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice actions
P7: Tactical Science Coordination Network: An effort to grow awareness and collaboration among biosecurity programs
P8: Long-term impact of integrated pest management programs on pesticide use in North India
P9: "I See Dead Plants” podcast—Communicating IPM research to the public
P10: New York State IPM Program’s response to Spotted Lanternfly’s arrival
P11: IPM adoption perspectives from the regions: Barriers and recommendations
P13: Pilot survey of dung beetles on cattle pastures in eastern New York
P15: Our beef with house flies: Understanding fly movement and behavior for risk assessment and improved fly management
P16: Handling invasive weeds in Migori county: An all-inclusive agenda for house holder food security
P17: Indirect effects of invasive insect management on forest insect biodiversity
P18: Rot diseases on Michigan chestnuts: pathogens, cultivar susceptibility and storage effect
P19: Understanding pest biology and exploring monitoring options for Pacific flatheaded borer in walnut orchards in California
P20: Improving in-row cultivation efficacy in carrots through seed selection and timing optimization
P21: Developing a degree-day model to predict overwintering carrot weevil emergence in Ohio parsley fields
P22: Reevaluation of squash bug, Anasa tristis, thresholds in Virginia summer squash (Cucurbita pepo) systems
P23: Improving two-spotted spider mite management in high tunnel cucumbers
P24: The art of attraction: Evaluation of vittatalactone, an aggregation pheromone, as an attractant for western cucumber beetles and possible synergies with plant volatiles
P25: Row covers provide sustainable resiliency to cucurbit pests
P27: Evaluating new fungicides with the TOMCAST forecasting model to limit Stemphylium vesicarium on asparagus fern
P28: Effects of micro-rates of 2,4-D and dicamba on lettuce
P29: Evaluation of table beet varieties for resistance to rhizomania caused by beet necrotic yellow vein virus
P30: Toxicity of newer insecticides to the adults of Trichogramma chilonis Ishii. (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) in tomato under greenhouse condition
P33: Establishing the mating disruption mechanism for San Jose scale in apples
P34: Evaluation of novel kairomone-based lures for attracting male and female tortricid moths in apple orchards
P35: Multi-cultivar grafting: Evaluating a novel low-cost, grower-friendly approach to monitor key apple pests
P36: Testing the efficacy of Cydia pomonella pheromone lures: A two state Study
P37: Fruit protective bags as a tool for valuable insights into a devastating fruit rot of wine grapes
P38: Peppermint response to mesotrione and S-metolachlor applied post-harvest
P39: Multiple pest management: Understanding the relationship between onion thrips and weed pressure
P40: Production of heirloom tomatoes on grafted rootstocks was highly variable in open field production in California
P41: Forty years of onion pest management: Advances and challenges.
P42: Is DOWNCAST an effective model for predicting onion downy mildew in Ontario, Canada?
P43: Western bean cutworm presence in Maine sweet corn
P44: Irrigation as a potato IPM component—Balancing in-field observations and soil water metrics
P45: Using spring-seeded grass cover crops to reduce herbicide inputs in plasticulture peppers
P46: Evaluation of alternative strategies for management of soilborne plant pathogens and nematodes
P47: Assessing the impact of Ruby-throated Hummingbird predation on spotted-wing Drosophila in raspberry
P48: Faunistic records of arthropods associated with elderberry in Missouri
P49: Integrated management of strawberry black root rot complex in a perennial organic production system
P50: The invasive Aspidiotus rigidus: A continuing IPM challenge in the Philippines
P51: Not being presented
P52: A decision support tool to track Spotted Lanternfly (Lycorma delicatula) development with a network of on-site real time microclimate data streams in the Eastern United States
P53: DDRP: A modeling tool to guide decision making for pest surveillance and management
P54: Digital epidemiology: Tool for timely phytosanitary decision making
P55: Data science: The challenges and opportunities in integrated pest management in the digital age
P56: Divided by water, united by need: Development of a best pest management report card for Puerto Rico & U.S. Virgin Islands’ farmers
P57: Understanding pest and natural enemy populations in urban gardens
P58: Rhizobacteria modulates the oviposition behavior of corn earworm in sweet corn
P59: Utilizing Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management Strategies to improve plant production in community gardens
P60: Regional IPM Centers: Our shared mission and what it means
P61: NIFA awarded 77 Crop Protection and Pest Management proposals worth $19.79M
P63: Eco-based pest management: “Push-pull” technology and companion planting in organic vegetables
P64: Holistic biodiversity assessment of eight fruit and vegetable farms in western Michigan
P65: Pepper weevil (Anthonomus eugenii) infestations and their control in U.S. North Central region
P66: California rice, the “Environmental Crop”—Integrated strategies for pest management in a unique rice production system
P68: IPM Strategic Plans for Ornamental Nurseries
P69: Oregon IPM Center at Oregon State University
P70: From corpses to the farm: How forensic entomology can assist agriculture
P71: IPM crop survey in North Dakota
P72: Integrated herbicide-resistant weed management practices: Current and future technologies
P74: Feeding preference and mortality of Osmia lignaria bees exposed to two novel insecticides
P75: Not being presented
P76: Not being presented
P77: MSU Enviroweather: Providing weather-based IPM solutions through alliances with Michigan agriculture
P78: Not being presented
P79: Regenerative agriculture: Benefits, barriers and call to action
P80: Building capacity for effective IPM implementation
P81: Potatoes to turfgrass: Promoting Extension’s IPM initiative across the North-Central East coast of Florida
P82: Promoting integrated pest management in Big Sky country: Meeting the diverse needs of the Montana population
P83: Better protected cowpea creates more business opportunities for women in West Africa
P84: Factors impacting soybean disease management decisions in Nebraska
P85: Not being presented
P87: Integrated management of sudden death syndrome (SDS)—A disease of soybean caused by Fusarium virguliforme
P88: Peanut and nematode response to rotation sequence, cultivar, and chemicals applied at planting
P89: Not being presented
P90: Crop rotation for rice systems in California: Baseline assessment of barriers and opportunities
P92: Agronomic and pesticide decisions for managing ear rots, mycotoxins and quality in Michigan corn silage
P93: The effects of planting population and nitrogen fertility on severity of tar spot of corn
P94: Phenotyping hessian fly resistance using spectral and surface model drone maps
P95: Integrated effect of row spacing and herbicide programs for control of multiple herbicide-resistant Palmer amaranth in corn
P96: Koch’s postulate of Macrophomina phaseolina on hemp and crops in rotation
P97: Evaluating an attract-and-kill tactic for Japanese beetle
P98: Identification of early and extra-early maturing tropical maize inbred lines with multiple disease resistance for use in sub-Saharan Africa
P99: IPM in potatoes: Predicting phenology of four hemipteran pests in the lower Columbia Basin
P100: Integrating environmental sensing and molecular pathogen detection methods for developing a risk prediction model on powdery scab in potato
P101: How are pest management issues and farmer’s practices evolving over time?
P102: What’s in spud soil? Findings from soil functional analysis
P103: Can a soil insecticide plus Bt corn effectively manage resistant western corn rootworms in Nebraska?
P104: Successful integrated pest management minimizes the economic impact of Diatraea saccharalis (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) on the Louisiana sugarcane industry
P105: Development of a dynamic action threshold for sugarcane aphids in sorghum
P106: Management of the sugarcane rust mite (Actinedida: Eriophyidae) using foliar miticides
P107: Image classification of sugarcane aphid densities using deep convolutional neural networks
P108: Aptness of indigenous natural products against pulse beetle, Callosobruchus chinensis l. (Bruchidae: Coleoptera) in mung bean
P109: Not being presented
P110: Impact of climate change on biodiversity of mycoflora associated with maize grains sampled from all over Egypt
P111: Biointensive management of fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith) in maize
P112: Integrated waterhemp management in corn and soybean of New York, USA
P113: The Glance-N-Go™ Sampling System: A presence-absence, sequential sampling system for scouting greenbug, sorghum aphid, and sorghum headworms.
P116: Whitefly resistance management: Time and space refugia in cross-commodity systems of Arizona and California
P117: Plant to plant communication in response to Helicoverpa zea herbivory
P118: Integrating short and long term
risk models for boxwood blight
P119: Effects of drought treatments on arthropod populations in floral hemp over the reproductive cycle
P120: Phytotoxicity of tolerant exempt pesticides on Cannabis sativa L. hemp transplants
P122: Developing sampling plans to estimate Asiatic garden beetle damage in commercial mint
P123: Not being presented
P124: Management of Phytophthora root rot using biofumigation for field grown boxwood
P125: Evaluation of fungicides at different application intervals in the management of boxwood blight in an IPM Program
P126: Assessment of physiological changes to monitor pests and diseases of container grown flowering dogwoods in drought condition
P127: Cover crop usage for the sustainable management of soilborne diseases in woody ornamental nursery production system
P128: Changes in IPM adoption by Utah’s fruit industry
P129: The fight against fire blight to protect Utah’s pome fruit industry
P130: IPM in action: Restoration of Lords Park, Elgin, IL
P131: Putting the “I” back in IPM: Using carbon monoxide to reduce rodenticide use at the Washington Monument grounds
P132: A success story of community online learning about ticks, tick-borne diseases and integrated tick management
P133: Creating a network to support urban growers
P134: Managing Agricultural Drainage Ditches to Improve Conservation Biological Control

