148-D - Vegetable and potato pest management.

§ 148-d. Vegetable  and  potato pest management. Within the integrated  pest management program, there shall  be  established  a  vegetable  and  potato  pest management program. Such program shall be conducted in such  a manner to achieve the following objectives:    1.  determine  the  occurrence  and  severity  of  pest  problems   in  commercial  fields,  and  identify  the  specific  environmental factors  influencing these events.  Document  the  current  pesticide  usage  and  assess the effectiveness of current pest management practices;    2.  determine  accurate  and  time-efficient  sampling  procedures and  forecasting methods which can be  utilized  by  private  consultants  or  through  cooperative  extension.  Determine the economic relationship of  pest incidence to yield or quality loss. Develop  non-pesticide  methods  of  pest  management  in  the  areas  of  cultural practices, biological  control and crop resistance. In addition the  proper  timing,  selection  and  use  of  pesticides  will be integrated into the overall management  programs;    3. aid growers in executing the most optimal crop  protection  program  by  providing  them  with timely reports on pest presence and population  density levels, forecasted pest occurrences, crop  growth,  weather  and  other   environmental   information,  and  providing  the  most  current  interpretation of the data;    4. increase efforts to educate growers in the principles  and  tactics  of integrated pest management and demonstrate the economic advantages of  such a program;    5. develop concepts, techniques, and cultivars for integration of pest  resistance with other management tactics in potato production (e.g. crop  rotation, biological control, optimum use of pesticides);    6.   develop   pest  sampling  procedures,  sound  action  thresholds,  forecasting  procedures,  and  economic  data  necessary  for  effective  decisions  in  use  of  pest  resistant  cultivars and other tactics for  management of pests;    7.  demonstrate  the  benefits  and  reliability  of   improved   pest  management tactics to the New York potato industry; and    8.  monitor  performance  of  the  proposed integrated pest management  program during  its  initial  phase  of  implementation  by  the  potato  industry.