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Full TGIF Record # 70982 Item 1 of 1 |
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Publication Type: | Report |
Content Type: | Abstract or Summary only |
Author(s): | Stahnke, G. K.; Miltner, E. D.; Antonelli, A. L. |
Author Affiliation: | Washington State University |
Title: | IPM as an alternative to Seattle's pesticide ban |
Section: | Turfgrass science Other records with the "Turfgrass science" Section |
Meeting Info.: | Minneapolis, MN: November 5-9, 2000 |
Source: | 2000 Annual Meeting Abstracts [ASA/CSSA/SSSA]. 2000, p. 156. |
Publishing Information: | [Madison, WI]: American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, Soil Science Society of America |
# of Pages: | 1 |
Keywords: | TIC Keywords: Integrated Pest Management; Pesticide usage legislation; Pesticide use; Environmental protection; Local legislation |
Geographic Terms: | Seattle |
Abstract/Contents: | "In fall of 1999, Seattle and King County, announced they would ban the use of most pesticides by July 2000, and then work to reduce all pesticide use by 30%. This applied only to outdoor landscape uses. This was in response to the Chinook salmon being listed under the Endangered Species Act. Seattle's Office of Environmental Management, hired the Washington Toxics Coalition to develop a 3-Tier list of pesticides. At this time, only Tier 1 herbicides and insecticides are targeted. A pesticide with the signal word DANGER on the label, a probable carcinogen or endocrine disruptor, or highly toxic to birds, bees, or aquatic species, is on a Tier 1 list. Tier 1 pesticides can not be used without an approved "exemption" from the city. Municipal Golf of Seattle, which manages the 3 city golf courses contracted with Washington State University to evaluate their existing IPM programs. WSU developed suggestions for the most effective and environmentally sound combination of cultural and pesticide recommendations to allow the city golf courses to handle 100,000 rounds of golf per golf course each year. WSU set up a team of 8 scientists, 4 golf course superintendents and 2 golf and city horticulture supervisors, who evaluated which products to use for specific situations." |
Language: | English |
References: | 0 |
Note: | This item is an abstract only! |
ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-like – may be incomplete): | Stahnke, G. K., E. D. Miltner, and A. L. Antonelli. 2000. IPM as an alternative to Seattle's pesticide ban. Annu. Meet. Abstr. p. 156. |
Fastlink to access this record outside TGIF: | http://tic.msu.edu/tgif/flink/RECNO/70982 |
Choices for finding the above item: | |
MSU catalog number: | S 1 .A58 |
InterLibrary Loan: | Request through your local library's inter-library loan service (bring or send a copy of this TGIF record) |
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