MyIPM vs IPM Impact - Pest Management Usage & Stats

MyIPM fruits provides Integrated Pest Management (IPM) information for conventional and organic production of important small fruits, stone fruits and pome fruits. The target audience is commercial growers (conventional and organic), farm advisors, and specialists, but homeowners may also find useful information. The home screen lets the user choose the fruit and discipline (pest or disease) and lets the user update data from the external database. The user can go back to this screen at any time and add or delete a selection. On top of this screen is a search bar that lets the user search active ingredients and trade names. Results will list the crop the product is registered for, the rate per acre and the efficacy rating. Then the user chooses one of the crop and discipline choices. The user taps a crop which opens up the disease or pest page. On any disease page the user can choose a disease by clicking the picture or choosing Overview/Gallery/More to learn more about it. Disease-specific information includes an overview about the disease and its management and a short, 2 to 3 min audio from the regional expert on the bottom of the page. The GALLERY features 6 pictures of disease signs and symptoms and pictures illustrating management solutions. The user can zoom in each picture. In the MORE section, the user finds information about the disease and its causal organism (including disease cycle and symptoms and signs), chemical control information, fungicide resistance information, and non-chemical control information (including biological control options, cultural control options, and resistant varieties). The same features can be pulled up for any pest. Underneath the feature picture of every disease-specific page the user can choose to list active ingredients and trade names registered in the United States. When tapping active ingredients, the user can choose between materials registered for conventional and organic production. Active ingredients are color coded according to FRAC (Fungicide Resistance Action Committee) code. The efficacy of the active ingredients to control the selected disease is listed as well as a risk assessment of that chemical as published by FRAC. Active ingredients, efficacy and risk assessments are sortable. When tapping an active ingredient, the registered trade names containing this active ingredient are displayed. Back on the disease page, tapping trade names for conventional or organic production displays many available trade names for the specific disease including active ingredients, efficacy rating, PHI (Preharvest Interval) values, REI (Reentry Interval) values, and toxicity risk ratings (low, medium, high in colors beige, yellow, red). Trade names, active ingredients, PHI values, REI values, efficacy and toxicity ratings are sortable. In order to quickly look up active ingredients and trade names for a specific disease, the user can tap the disease on the top and choose another disease on the drop-down menu. Back on the disease page, the user can choose to listen to more audio recordings by tapping the headset symbol in the top right. The audios are from southeastern specialists and deal with pest and disease management. A really useful feature is the select button on the top right. It lets the user move seamlessly from one disease to another on whatever page is displayed at the moment.
  • Apple App Store
  • Free
  • Productivity

Store Rank

- -

Integrated Pest Management has become an essential part of plant protection in horticulture all over the world. The combination of beneficial organisms, selective pesticides, monitoring and other cultural management measurements makes it possible to reduce the number of chemical treatments while tolerating acceptable pest levels. The success behind this strategy is hardly based on environmental concerns, but is mainly driven by economic and practical reasons like resistance management or the use of pollinators like bumblebees or honeybees. Recently, the extralegal requirements by some European supermarkets on the number and the amount of residues on fruit and vegetables, and the strict import rules on the used plant protection products by countries like Russia have strongly augmented the demand for IPM based pest and disease control in many horticultural crops. However, for growers, advisory people, registration officers and even chemical companies employees, things are getting more and more complicated. They do not only need to know which product they can use to control a pest or disease, but also if there are any undesirable side-effects on the used micro- and macro-organisms, and if so, how they can still implement the treatment while minimising the effects of the treatment on the biological balance between predator and prey, or parasitoid and host. This is where this website comes in to help. IPM Impact is proud to present the most comprehensive database on side-effects of plant protection compounds and growth regulators on beneficial organisms and pollinators in the world. It contains more than 13000 data on different beneficial arthropods, zoophagous nematodes, microbials or pollinators from more than 400 active ingredients.
  • Apple App Store
  • Free
  • Productivity

Store Rank

- -

MyIPM vs. IPM Impact - Pest Management ranking comparison

Compare MyIPM ranking trend in the past 28 days vs. IPM Impact - Pest Management

Rank

No Data Available

MyIPM vs. IPM Impact - Pest Management ranking by country comparison

Compare MyIPM ranking trend in the past 28 days vs. IPM Impact - Pest Management

No Data to Display

Compare to any site with our free trial

Get started
MyIPM VS.
IPM Impact - Pest Management

December 26, 2024