Source: UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS submitted to NRP
2024 CALIFORNIA EXTENSION IMPLEMENTATION PROGRAM
Sponsoring Institution
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Project Status
ACTIVE
Funding Source
Reporting Frequency
Annual
Accession No.
1032972
Grant No.
2024-70006-43546
Cumulative Award Amt.
$285,000.00
Proposal No.
2024-03478
Multistate No.
(N/A)
Project Start Date
Sep 1, 2024
Project End Date
Aug 31, 2025
Grant Year
2024
Program Code
[EIP]- Extension Implementation Program
Recipient Organization
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS
410 MRAK HALL
DAVIS,CA 95616-8671
Performing Department
(N/A)
Non Technical Summary
This proposal from the University of California Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program (UC IPM) addresses Administrative Coordination (13%), IPM Implementation for Agronomic Crops and/or Specialty Crops (17%), IPM for Pollinator Health (18%), and IPM Implementation in Communities including Housing and Schools (52%). The work proposed builds on previous EIP-funded grant outputs and successes, such as the launch of MyIPM. The overall goals are to develop extension products and trainings that make IPM information readily available to all Californians. That includes web content; how-to videos; continuing education as webinars or online courses; and in-person and train-the-trainer workshops. The Coordination objectives will provide newly hired Cooperative Extension academics with the awareness of IPM resources that can assist in their success. The IPM in Agronomic/Specialty Crops objectives are to develop pest weather model user alerts, continue our successful webinar series, add another online course on vertebrate pest management, and publish a new date palm pest management resource. We propose a new online resource about native bees found in agricultural crops, webinars, and updating the Bee Precautions Pesticide Ratings online tool for the IPM for Pollinator Health priority. In IPM for Communities, we will continue in-person and webinar trainings. We propose focusing on public health pests, pesticide safety, and IPM for lawns and turfgrass, developing content for pest management professionals, housing managers, and residents. We propose to update the UC lawn guide, adding information that will be of greater use by groundskeepers at school sites and other managed landscapes.
Animal Health Component
(N/A)
Research Effort Categories
Basic
(N/A)
Applied
(N/A)
Developmental
(N/A)
Classification

Knowledge Area (KA)Subject of Investigation (SOI)Field of Science (FOS)Percent
2162410106019%
2163085106021%
2166099106060%
Goals / Objectives
COORDINATIONCoordination, educational materials development, and delivery of IPM information in California. Coordinate, communicate, and collaborate with other IPM leaders in the western states through the IPM regional technical committee, WERA-1017. Provide an administrative home for the Western IPM Center ensuring communication of IPM priorities in the west, opportunities to leverage new IPM research, extension materials, and tactics developed in other western states, and methods for UC IPM to address high-priority needs.Objective 1: Hold annual program planning and IPM regional committee meetings.Objective 2: Ensure a successful start for new Cooperative Extension academics by showing them IPM resources via an online tour.AGRONOMIC AND/OR SPECIALTY CROPSObjective 1: Launch MyIPM: 1) launch login and grape powdery mildew risk index alerts, and 2) develop alerts for the fire blight model.Objective 2: Host and facilitate twelve webinars at four per year covering IPM topics in agronomic or specialty crops. Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year on invasive pest topics.Objective 3: From a previously recorded webinar, develop and publish an interactive online course on vertebrate management using our quick conversion process.Objective 4: Publish a Date Palm Pest Management Guidelines that cover IPM practices in California and Arizona.POLLINATOR HEALTHObjective 1: Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year covering pollinator topics related to IPM.Objective 2: Develop an online Bee Gallery for bees in agriculture.Objective 3: Update and improve the Bee Precautions Pesticide Ratings tool.COMMUNITIESObjective 1: Develop and update educational material on pests around homes, schools, gardens, and landscapes. The information will be shared with and disseminated by UC Master Gardeners, retail nursery employees, school district staff, structural and landscape pest management professionals, and public housing/multi-unit housing audiences (including property managers, maintenance staff, landlords, and tenants).Objective 2: Revise and update the UC Guide to Healthy Lawns currently directed mainly at homeowners.
Project Methods
COORDINATIONThe IPM resources tours will be designed to introduce new UC ANR academics to the pest management content and tools available on the UC IPM website. Resources covered will include the 47-crop Pest Management Guidelines publication series, Year-Round IPM Programs, and decision-assisting tools that mitigate the risk of harm to humans and the environment when pesticides are the appropriate solution. Online resources such as the Weed Gallery, UC Ag Experts Talk Webinar series, and online courses will also be covered. This resource tour package will need to be assembled--consisting of a PowerPoint presentation and planned activities. We will check in with the academics again in six months and after one year of the initial tour to remind academics of the resources, answer questions, and get feedback.AGRONOMIC AND/OR SPECIALTY CROPSMyIPM is a login system that allows users to quickly access the specific information they need. We have done much of the backend coding to support MyIPM and will initially launch the system with risk alerts from the grape powdery mildew weather-based risk model. We will compile the alerts for fire blight by determining key times when pest management decisions could be made and getting these reviewed by stakeholders. Once finalized, users can sign up to receive the alerts. Feedback from users via a survey will be analyzed and used to make improvements.For the webinars, UC IPM staff will work with collaborator Rijal to identify speakers and determine scheduling. We work closely with the speakers to ensure the webinar is interactive (polls and chat questions) and meets the requirements for continuing education units (active participation in polls throughout the webinar and a final test). We will promote and facilitate the webinar, ensuring live transcript for accessibility. We edit the recording and correct the closed captions (e.g., punctuation, synchronization, and 99% accuracy). Webinar recording will be posted on our YouTube channel.For the vertebrate online quick course, we will follow our standard online process using a prerecorded presentation: draft learning objectives with collaborator Baldwin and draft review and final exam question, followed by compiling the online course, and technical review. Once the online course is finalized, continuing education units will be requested, a feedback survey implemented, and the course published on Extension Foundation's online course platform.For the Date Palm Pest Management Guidelines, we will follow our standard publication process: draft content with the authors (Krueger, Mauk, Perring, and Roshausen) and gather resources such as images, conduct blind peer review process followed by responding to peer review comments, pesticide review by Office of Pesticide Information and Coordination to check the regulatory appropriateness of pesticides mentioned for California, and work with the UC IPM Production/IT Team to publish online.POLLINATOR HEALTHFor the pollinator webinars, UC IPM staff will identify speakers and schedules. We work closely with the speakers to ensure the webinar is interactive (polls and chat questions) and meets the requirements for continuing education units (active participation in polls throughout the webinar and a final test). We will promote and facilitate the webinar, ensuring live transcript for accessibility. We edit the recording and correct the closed captions (e.g., punctuation, synchronization, and 99% accuracy). Recordings will be posted on UC IPM's YouTube channel.To develop the image resources for the Bee Gallery, we will work with Cooperative Extension academics throughout the state to visit commercial agricultural fields and orchards to document bee visitors to the crop (e.g., caneberries, apple, almond, sunflower, safflower, cherry, and cucurbits). Bees will be photographed and identified by Krystle Hickman, with the assistance of resources such as Hymenoptera of the World: An Identification Guide to Families and other experts as necessary, such as Gordon Frankie. Bee galleries will be drafted using resources such as Common Bees in California Gardens. The Bee Gallery website will be developed using our standard process of mockup development by our web designer, review by experts and other users, prototype development based on feedback received, another round of review, and then the final design developed, followed by coding. The Bee Gallery will go through several rounds of review with improvements before publishing online.To add new pesticide active ingredient ratings to the Bee Precautions Pesticide Ratings UC IPM staff will review several data sources such as the label, US Environmental Protection Agency research, and scientific literature. Proposed ratings will be reviewed by subject matter experts. When consensus is reached, ratings will be added to the current database and presented online via the Bee Precaution Pesticide Ratings online tool and in the Pest Management Guidelines.COMMUNITIESUrban and Community IPM topics covered will range from pests of public health concern, pesticide safety, and weed control and turf care in school grounds, parks and recreation sites, and other landscapes. This effort will leverage activities from previously funded CPPM EIP grants. The updated resources will be used and distributed during trainings. We will update existing, develop new, and promote relevant UC IPM Pest Notes and Quick Tips to serve as the primary source of written information for pest management professionals, housing managers, and residents dealing with pests. Materials developed will also include two long-standing newsletters: Green Bulletin for licensed pest management professionals, and the Home & Garden Pest News aimed at the general public including UC Master Gardeners.For the webinars, UC IPM urban staff will identify speakers and develop schedules. We work closely with the speakers to ensure the webinar is engaging, timely, and suitable for the target audiences. We will promote and facilitate the webinar, and also ensure live transcript for accessibility. We edit the recording and correct the closed captions (e.g., punctuation, synchronization, and 99% accuracy).For each training workshop, we will gather a team of experts and other stakeholders to plan the activity timeline, develop learning objectives, and gather resources. Most planning will begin in Year 2, with materials finalized and delivered in Year 3. Materials such as the newsletters, Pest Notes, and Quick Tips will be worked on throughout the course of the grant period and will be incorporated into the appropriate training activity and audience outreach.We will rebuild the UC Guide to Healthy Lawn web pages to incorporate updated, relevant practices consistent with IPM principles. For the lawn guide update, we will compile a team of subject matter experts to review, update, and finalize the content. We will add information that will be of greater use by groundskeepers at school sites, maintenance gardeners, professional landscapers, as well as the general public. We will focus on lawn replacement and newer practices for lawn and turf care and weed management.

Progress 09/01/24 to 08/31/25

Outputs
Target Audience:WERA-1017 members, Western IPM Center staff, University of California Cooperative Extension, UC Master Gardeners, UC Master Food Preservers, California Naturalists. University of California campus-based researchers, growers, pest control advisers, California Association of Pest Control Advisers, Association of Applied IPM Ecologists, Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, California and Oregon state beekeepers associations, pest management professionals, the urban community, California's structural pest control industry, Pest Control Operators of California, California Department of Pesticide Regulation (Community IPM Program), retail nursery and garden center employees, structural and landscape pest management professionals, public housing managers and staff and residents, hobby gardeners, pesticide applicators, the general public Changes/Problems: Nothing Reported What opportunities for training and professional development has the project provided? Nothing Reported How have the results been disseminated to communities of interest?Notices for new newsletters and webinar recordings are posted online in What's New: https://ipm.ucanr.edu/whats-new/. Resources are advertised through social media (Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn), and through the blog: Pests in the Urban Landscape (https://ucanr.edu/blog/pests-urban-landscape). Presentations given by IPM staff and others in UC ANR promote our new resources and information. What do you plan to do during the next reporting period to accomplish the goals?Administrative Coordination Plan Objective 1: Hold annual program planning and IPM regional committee meetings. Hold Program Advisory Committee meeting in fall 2025. Hold IPM Annual Planning Meeting in spring 2026. Objective 2: Ensure a successful start for new Cooperative Extension academics by showing them IPM resources via an online tour. Invite new academics as they are hired. Schedule and hold tours for those that accept. After tours, follow up 6 months and 1 year after to answer questions and review resources. IPM for Agronomic and/or Specialty Crops Objective 1: Launch myIPM: 1) launch login and grape powdery mildew risk index alerts, and 2) develop alerts for the fire blight model. Assess feedback from initial myIPM launch and grape powdery mildew alerts. Compile fire blight alerts based on the pest weather model. Objective 2: Host and facilitate twelve webinars at four per year covering IPM topics in agronomic or specialty crops. Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year on invasive pest topics. Host 5 webinars. Objective 3: From a previously recorded webinar, develop and publish an interactive online course on vertebrate management using our quick conversion process. Develop learning objectives. Write review questions and pool of exam questions. Review with subject matter expert. Objective 4: Publish a Date Palm Pest Management Guidelines that cover IPM practices in California and Arizona. Finalize draft for peer review and pesticide review. Enter images into UC IPM's Image Database. IPM for Pollinator Health Objective 1: Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year covering pollinator topics related to IPM. Host 1 webinar Objective 2: Update and improve the Bee Precautions Pesticide Ratings tool. Meet with technical authors to finalize ratings based on current research. Publish 4 pesticide ratings. Determine the next set of active ingredients to research for ratings development. IPM Implementation in Communities including Housing and Schools Objective 1: Develop and update educational material on pests around homes, schools, gardens, and landscapes. The information will be shared with and disseminated by UC Master Gardeners, retail nursery employees, school district staff, and public housing/multi-unit housing audiences (including property managers, maintenance staff, landlords, and tenants). Newsletters: Green Bulletin and Home and Garden Pest News--Publish 3 issues of each. Pest Notes: Update 4 to 6 existing titles Webinars: Host 8 to 10 webinars. Train-the-Trainer Workshops: Plan for workshops and invite speakers. Videos: Film videos, edit, and add closed captioning. Objective 2: Revise and update the UC Guide to Healthy Lawns currently directed mainly at homeowners. Review existing content and gather updated information. Send updates to Production/IT Team, review, and publish.

Impacts
What was accomplished under these goals? Administrative Coordination Plan Objective 1: Hold annual program planning and IPM regional committee meetings. (30% completion) Accomplishments: Presented a poster at the CPPM EIP Project Director's Workshop held in conjunction with 11th International IPM Symposium in March 2025. Participated in the WERA 1017 meeting held in conjunction with 11th International IPM Symposium in March 2025. Held annual IPM meeting in April 2025. Began preparations for the UC IPM Program Advisory Committee meeting in fall 2025. Objective 2: Ensure a successful start for new Cooperative Extension academics by showing them IPM resources via an online tour. (15% completion) Accomplishments: Tour agenda, resources, and presentation prepared. Initial tour invites are out (3), 3 invites were accepted, and 1 tour was completed. IPM for Agronomic and/or Specialty Crops Objective 1: Launch myIPM: 1) launch login and grape powdery mildew risk index alerts, and 2) develop alerts for the fire blight model. (50% completion) Accomplishments: Internal launch of myIPM for staff and external launch with grape advisors to assess the grape powdery mildew risk index alerts. Objective 2: Host and facilitate twelve webinars at four per year covering IPM topics in agronomic or specialty crops. Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year on invasive pest topics. (33% completion) Accomplishments: Hosted 5 webinars. Outcomes: 945 people participated in 5 webinars (618 for continuing education units). 97% (n=73) of survey respondents strongly agreed and agreed they learned new knowledge based on attending the webinar. 62% (n=57) of survey respondents strongly agreed or agreed that they planned to implement at least one technique/practice learned based on attending the webinar. Objective 3: From a previously recorded webinar, develop and publish an interactive online course on vertebrate management using our quick conversion process. (25% completion) Accomplishments: Discussed the topic and process with the subject matter expert. Decided to record a new webinar. Objective 4: Publish a Date Palm Pest Management Guidelines that cover IPM practices in California and Arizona. (33% completion) Accomplishments: Crop team and authors identified. Crop team meeting held to determine pests covered in the Guidelines. Background resources and photo identified. First draft complete. IPM for Pollinator Health Objective 1: Host and facilitate three webinars at one per year covering pollinator topics related to IPM. (66% completion) Accomplishments: Hosted 2 webinars. Outcomes: 210 people participated in 2 webinars (140 for continuing education units). 93% (n=26) of survey respondents strongly agreed and agreed they learned new knowledge based on attending the webinar. 57% (n=16) of survey respondents strongly agreed or agreed that they planned to implement at least one technique/practice learned based on attending the webinar. Objective 2: Update and improve the Bee Precautions Pesticide Ratings tool. (33% completion) Accomplishments: From the list of active ingredients not in the current Ratings tool, selected 3 to research and develop new ratings, and 1 to review for a potential rating change--fenazaquin, cyazofamid, fluopyram, and flupyradifurone. IPM Implementation in Communities including Housing and Schools Objective 1: Develop and update educational material on pests around homes, schools, gardens, and landscapes. The information will be shared with and disseminated by UC Master Gardeners, retail nursery employees, school district staff, and public housing/multi-unit housing audiences (including property managers, maintenance staff, landlords, and tenants). (30% completion) Accomplishments: Newsletters: Green Bulletin and Home and Garden Pest News--Published 3 issues of each. Pest Notes: Updated 4 existing titles--Squash Bugs, Phytophthora Root and Crown Rot, Moles, Russian Thistle. Webinars: Hosted 8 webinars. Train-the-Trainer Workshops: Developed training materials. Videos: Developed storyboards for short instructional videos. Objective 2: Revise and update the UC Guide to Healthy Lawns currently directed mainly at homeowners. (10% completion) Accomplishments: Put together the team of experts.

Publications

  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2025 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2025. Home and Garden Pest Newsletter. Volume 5: 1. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/home-and-garden-pest-newsletter/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2024 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2025. Home and Garden Pest Newsletter. Volume 4: 3. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/home-and-garden-pest-newsletter/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2024 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2025. Home and Garden Pest Newsletter. Volume 4: 2. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/home-and-garden-pest-newsletter/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2025 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2025. Green Bulletin Newsletter. Volume 15: 1. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/green-bulletin/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2024 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2024. Green Bulletin Newsletter. Volume 14: 3. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/green-bulletin/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2024 Citation: University of California Statewide IPM Program. 2024. Green Bulletin Newsletter. Volume 14: 2. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/green-bulletin/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2025 Citation: Oneto S, DiTomaso J. 2025. UC IPM Pest Notes: Russian Thistle. UC ANR Publication 7486. Davis, CA. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/legacy_assets/PDF/PESTNOTES/pnrussianthistle.pdf
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2025 Citation: Rijal JP, Schellman A. 2025. UC IPM Pest Notes: Squash Bugs. UC ANR Publication 74144. Davis, CA. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/squash-bugs/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2025 Citation: Downer AJ, Perry EJ, Swain SS. 2025. UC IPM Pest Notes: Phytophthora Root and Crown Rot. UC ANR Publication 74133. Davis, CA. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/phytophthora-root-and-crown-rot/
  • Type: Other Status: Published Year Published: 2024 Citation: Baldwin RA. 2024. UC IPM Pest Notes: Moles. UC ANR Publication 74115. Davis, CA. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/home-and-landscape/moles/pest-notes/