PMSP GUIDELINES http://www.sripmc.org/
Benefits of Crop Profiles and Pest Management
Strategic Plans (PMSPs)
Each year several
million dollars are available in the form of competitive grants to support pest
management research and extension programs. The Requests for Proposals (RFPs)
for these grants have become more specific in recent years reflecting the
desire of the funding agencies/organizations to address important near and
mid-term pest management-related projects. Some common themes are often found
in the RFPs. One is a request for a discussion on how the proposed project will
meet stakeholder needs. Stakeholders traditionally include the clientele of a
program or project, such as farmers or agribusiness, but can also include other
persons interested in the outcome of the research or extension program. Some
RFPs indicate preference will be given to proposals which address priorities
established by stakeholders; consequently, proposal review panels look for
evidence of stakeholder involvement.
Another common
theme in some of these grant programs is to find pest management alternatives
for pesticides canceled or restricted as a result of federal legislation or
regulation. The Methyl Bromide Transitions Program (MBT), Crops at Risk from
FQPA Implementation (CAR), and FQPA Risk avoidance and Mitigation for Major
Food Crop Systems (RAMP) are examples. The USDA Regional Pest Management
Centers established in 2000 in each USDA region are focal points for issues
related to pest management and pesticide-related information.
Pest Management
Strategic Plan The development of a Pest Management Strategic Plan (PMSP) is a
method of setting pest management priorities for a commodity and demonstrating
stakeholder involvement in the process. The USDA's Office of Pest Management
Policy (OPMP) developed the PMSP as a planning and priority setting process to
facilitate a transition to alternative pest management practices when one or
more pesticides used to manage pests on a crop are lost as a result of
regulatory review. Land Grant University research and extension specialists or
commodity organizations, often with the assistance of personnel from the USDA
OPMP, facilitate the development of PMSPs. Growers, commodity representatives,
land-grant specialists, food processors, crop consultants, and other stakeholders
are generally involved in the process.
Ideally, a PMSP
outlines the current state of pest management for a commodity at the state,
region, or national level and presents a prioritized list of needs for
research, regulatory activity, and extension education to facilitate the
transition to alternative pest management practices. The plans take a crop
phenology and pest-by-pest approach to identifying and assessing the current
management practices (chemical and non-chemical). The stakeholders involved in the
PMSP process also identify and prioritize their pest management research,
regulatory and extension needs.
Crop Profiles The
USDA Office of Pest Management Policy introduced the concept of crop profiles
about four years ago as a means to describe the production practices for a
commodity, the pest problems associated with its production, and the pest
management practices (chemical and non-chemical) currently used to control the
pests. Crop profiles are most frequently developed on a state by state basis but
are sometimes developed on a regional or national basis for a specific crop.
More recently descriptions of the type and frequency of worker activities with
the crop have begun to be added to crop profiles. Crop profiles can be used to
identify areas of critical need (i.e. those crops or situations where few if
any alternative control measures are available to producers). Crop profiles do
not generally identify and prioritize pest management research, regulatory and
extension education needs for a commodity. Crop profiles are the starting point
for developing a PMSP where the stakeholders involved in the process can
identify and prioritize such needs.
Commodity
organizations are finding crop profiles and PMSPs to be useful in dealing with
issues raised by EP A in risk assessments for specific pesticides and in
identifying critical pest management issues and prioritizing research efforts
for the commodities they represent. The EP A has found crop profiles and PMSPs
to be extremely useful in conducting benefits assessments for their
occupational and environmental risk assessments. The executive summaries of
some PMSPs are being used to provide information to legislators and other
persons who have an interest in agricultural issues. Commodity boards and commissions
that have research programs are finding that the identification and
prioritization of pest management needs in a PMSP ensures that these research
programs address clientele needs. Crop profiles and PMSPs provide a baseline
estimate of the state of the art of IPM for a commodity and an opportunity to
evaluate pest management goals.
Examples of
completed crop profiles and PMSPs can be found at www.Qmcenters.org.
Instructions for preparing crop profiles and a check list for organizing a PMSP
can also be found at www .Qmcenters.org.
The following are
several examples of where PMSPs and crop profiles, along with a good research
plan, have been successfully used to support the need for competitive funding
requests:
Michigan. Carrot
producers obtained a USDA Pest Management Alternatives Program (PMAP) grant for
"Reducing Use of B2 Carcinogens in Michigan Carrots" totaling $39,498
as a result of the priorities identified in a PMSP for carrots.
Michigan. The
Michigan carrot PMSP was a strong basis for a $1,254,061 RAMP grant to a
Michigan State University researcher for a project called "A Partnership
Among Eastern U.S. Carrot Stakeholders to Develop and Implement IPM".
Michigan.
Blueberry producers received a PMAP grant for "Insecticide Mitigation
Strategies for the High Risk, High Value Michigan Blueberry Crop" in the
amount of $135,500 which was based on the priorities identified in the Michigan
blueberry PMSP.
Michigan. A
Michigan State University researcher obtained a Crops at Risk grant for
"Seeking Alternatives to B2 Fungicides and Carbamate Insecticides for
Asparagus Production" in the amount of $396,425 based on priorities
established in an asparagus PMSP.
New Jersey. A PMAP
grant for "Reducing Insecticide Use and Their Associated Risks in Peach Production"
was funded at $164,479 based on a completed crop profile and PMSP which defined
research priorities for peaches.
North Carolina.
Several collaborators obtained a $163,113 PMAP grant for "Southern
Appalachian Apple IPM Research and Implementation Program." A regional
crop profile was used to establish the need for this project.
California. The
California Department of Pesticide Regulation initiated a Pest Management
Alliance (PMA) grant program in 1998. One of the criteria for successful submissions
is a detailed analysis of pest management issues for the commodity. Crop
profiles and PMSPs serve this requirement. As a result, a number of commodity
groups and/or university researchers have been successful in obtaining PMA
grants. They include:
The California
Walnut Board was the first group to successfully obtain funding based on a crop
profile. They have received three grants totaling $265,750.
The Almond Board
of California was obtained a three year grant in the amount of $296,732 based
on their crop profile and PMSP.
Other California
commodities receiving PMA grants are rice ($20,000); poultry ( $199,597 ); wine
grapes ($99,380), prunes ($142,727), lettuce ($58,000), strawberry ($186,758),
pear ($165,750), sugarbeet ($156,690), and peach, plum and nectarine ($82,576).
All of these commodities have crop profiles. Peaches and wine grapes also have
PMSPs.