02778 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036007000300056008004100059020001800100100001900118245006000137260004200197300002700239650001200266650001700278650002600295700002200321520214900343082001102492084001702503990001602520INLIS00000000000028920240731014536 a0010-0124000018ta240731 g 0 eng  a81-224-0581-20 aHeinrichs, E.A1 aBiology and Management of Rice Insect /cHeinrichs, E.A aIndia :bWiley Eastern Limited,c1994 a763 :bilustrasi ;c25 4aBiology 4aRice Insects 4aRak Koleksi Referensi1 aAguda, R.M, et al aINSECT PESTS ARE severe constraints to rice production throughout the world. Although rice insect outbreaks are recorded in antiquity, evidence indicates that the severity and frequency of attack has increased in the last several decades. The increase appears to have accompanied crop intensifica- tion. Thus, for high yielding, green revolution varieties to achieve near their yield potential, various constraints, including those imposed by insects, must be mitigated. Integrated pest management has been accepted as the rationale approach to the regulation of rice insect populations. Integrated pest management is an economically attractive and ecologically and sociologically acceptable means of managing rice insect populations. To most effectively implement integrated pest management programs requires first of all a proper identification of the pest complex and an understanding of the biological and ecological factors that regulate pest populations. With these building blocks as a firm foundation for properly characterizing and monitoring insect populations, various pest control tactics have been developed and integrated into rice insect management programs. Success in the development and implementation of effective rice insect management programs has been limited in scope and has yet to be even partially achieved in many of the rice growing regions of the world. Success cannot be achieved without a development of the required skills. The authors have written this book to provide the basic information needed to develop those skills. There has been an acute need for a book that draws together the fundamentals of rice insect taxonomy, biology, and ecology, and the various control tactics, and explains how these are in- tegrated into a successful rice insect management program. The authors have drawn upon their extensive experience in rice entomology and have succeeded remarkably well in filling that need through the completion of this book. Its publication is evidence of our desire to promote and accelerate the development of integrated pest management systems for rice throughout the rice growing world. a633.18 a633.18 HEI b a00000000174