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dc.contributor.authorSettle, William H.
dc.contributor.authorAriawan, Hartiahyo
dc.contributor.authorAstuti, Endah Tri
dc.contributor.authorCahyana, Widyastama
dc.contributor.authorHakim, Arief Lukman
dc.contributor.authorHindayana, Dadan
dc.contributor.authorLestari, lifah Sri
dc.contributor.authorPajarningsih
dc.date.accessioned2010-07-02T07:41:33Z
dc.date.available2010-07-02T07:41:33Z
dc.date.issued1996
dc.identifier.issnIPB (Bogor Agricultural University)-
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.ipb.ac.id/handle/123456789/30040
dc.description.abstractThe cultivation of tropical Asian rice, which may have originated 9000 yr ago, represents an agricultural ecosystem of unrivaled ecological complexity. We undertook a study of the community ecology of irrigated tropical rice fields on Java, Indonesia, as a supporting study for the Indonesian National Integrated Pest Management Programme, whose purpose is to train farmers to be better agronomists and to employ the principles of integrated pest management (IPM). Two of our study objectives, reported on here, were (1) to explore whether there exist general and consistent patterns of arthropod community dynamics related to natural or intrinsic levels of biological control, and (2) to understand how the existing levels of biological control are affected by insecticide use, as well as by large-scale habitat factors relating to differing patterns for vegetational landscapes, planting times, and the length of dry fallow periods.id
dc.publisherIPB (Bogor Agricultural University)
dc.titleManaging Tropical Rice Pests Through Conservation of Generalist Natural Enemies and Alternative Preyid
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Agriculture

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