Browsing by Author "Wilson, James"
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- 2020 Spray Bulletin for Commercial Tree Fruit Growers: Virginia, West Virginia, and University of MarylandPfeiffer, Douglas G.; Bergh, J. Christopher; Wilson, James; Hooks, C. R. R.; Sherif, Sherif M.; Walsh, C. S.; Yoder, Keith S.; Rahman, Mahfaz; Kotcon, J. B.; Derr, Jeffrey F.; Chandran, Rakesh S.; Frank, Daniel L.; Wycoff, Stephanie B.; Brown, Amy; Parkhurst, James A. (2020)Integrated pest management (IPM) is the approach emphasized in this guide; some aspects of IPM are incorporated throughout, although this guide mainly deals with the chemical component of IPM. IPM combines biological control from predators with selective chemical application for maintaining pest populations below economic threshold levels. This approach requires that growers give careful consideration to the selection, application rate and timing of chemical sprays. The degree of integration achieved will vary according to the management ability, training and objectives of the orchardist. Inadequate monitoring or implementation of IPM practices will lead to unsatisfactory results. In order to encourage the biological control components of the program, growers must consider the toxicity of chemicals to predators (Table 9, page 59) in addition to their efficacy against fruit pests (Tables 7 and 8, pages 56-58)...
- 2021 Field Crops PMGBalota, Maria; Besancon, Thierry E.; Cahoon, Charles W.; Chandra, Rakesh; Currin, John F.; Day, Eric R.; Flessner, Michael; Frame, William Hunter, 1985-; Frank, Daniel; Hines, Tommy; Herbert, D. Ames Jr.; Johnson, Charles S.; Johnson, Quintin; Jordan, David; Koehler, Alyssa; Langston, David B.; Lamb, Curt; Lingenfelter, Dwight; McCoy, Tim; Singh, Vijay; Taylor, Sally V.; VanGessel, Mark; Vollmer, Kurt; Wallace, John M.; Wilson, James (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2021-02-12)The Virginia Pest Management Guide (PMG) series lists options for management of major pests: diseases, insects, nematodes, and weeds. These guides are produced by Virginia Cooperative Extension and each guide is revised annually. PMG recommendations are based on research conducted by the Research and Extension Division of Virginia Tech, in cooperation with other land-grant universities, the USDA, and the pest management industry. Commercial products are named in this publication for informational purposes only. Virginia Cooperative Extension does not endorse these products and does not intend discrimination against other products that also may be suitable.
- 2021 Home Grounds and Animals PMG - Author Contact ListAskew, Shawn D.; Wycoff, Stephanie B.; Bergh, J. Christopher; Bush, Elizabeth A.; Day, Eric R.; Del-Pozo, Alejandro; Derr, Jeffrey F.; Frank, Daniel L.; Hansen, Mary Ann; Hong, Chuan X.; Laub, Curtis A.; McCall, David S.; Miller, Dini M.; Nita, Mizuho; Parkhurst, James A.; Paulson, Sally L.; Pfeiffer, Douglas G.; Rideout, Steven L.; Wilson, James; Yoder, Keith S. (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2021-02-12)This is a chapter of the 2021 Home Grounds and Animals PMG. This 2021 Virginia Pest Management Guide provides the latest recommendations for controlling diseases, insects, and weeds for home grounds and animals. This publication contains information about prevention and nonchemical control as alternatives to chemical control or as part of an integrated pest management approach. The chemical controls in this guide are based on the latest pesticide label information at the time of writing. Because pesticide labels change, read the label directions carefully before buying and using any pesticide. Regardless of the information provided here, always follow the latest product label instructions when using any pesticide. Commercial products are named in this publication for informational purposes only. Virginia Cooperative Extension does not endorse these products and does not intend discrimination against other products that also may be suitable.
- 2021 Home Grounds and Animals PMG - IndexBalota, Maria; Besancon, Thierry E.; Cahoon, Charles W.; Chandran, Rakesh; Currin, John F.; Day, Eric R.; Flessner, Michael; Frame, William Hunter; Frank, Daniel; Hines, Tommy; Herbert, Ames Jr.; Johnson, Charles S.; Johnson, Quintin; Jordan, David; Koehler, Alyssa; Langston, David B.; Laub, Curt; Lingenfelter, Dwight; McCoy, Tim; Singh, Vijay; Taylor, Sally V.; VanGessel, Mark; Vollmer, Kurt; Wallace, John M.; Wilson, James (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2021-02-12)This is a chapter of the 2021 Field Crops PMG. The Virginia Pest Management Guide (PMG) series lists options for management of major pests: diseases, insects, nematodes, and weeds. These guides are produced by Virginia Cooperative Extension and each guide is revised annually. PMG recommendations are based on research conducted by the Research and Extension Division of Virginia Tech, in cooperation with other land-grant universities, the USDA, and the pest management industry. Commercial products are named in this publication for informational purposes only. Virginia Cooperative Extension does not endorse these products and does not intend discrimination against other products that also may be suitable.
- 2021 Home Grounds PMG - IndexAskew, Shawn D.; Wycoff, Stephanie B.; Bush, Elizabeth A.; Day, Eric R.; Del-Pozo, Alejandro; Derr, Jeffrey F.; Frank, Daniel L.; Hansen, Mary Ann; Laub, Curtis A.; McCall, David S.; Miller, Dini M.; Nita, Mizuho; Parkhurst, James A.; Paulson, Sally L.; Pfeiffer, Douglas G.; Rideout, Steven L.; Wilson, James; Yoder, Keith S.; Hong, Chuan X. (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2021-02-12)This is a chapter of the 2021 Home Grounds and Animals PMG. This 2021 Virginia Pest Management Guide provides the latest recommendations for controlling diseases, insects, and weeds for home grounds and animals. This publication contains information about prevention and nonchemical control as alternatives to chemical control or as part of an integrated pest management approach. The chemical controls in this guide are based on the latest pesticide label information at the time of writing. Because pesticide labels change, read the label directions carefully before buying and using any pesticide. Regardless of the information provided here, always follow the latest product label instructions when using any pesticide. Commercial products are named in this publication for informational purposes only. Virginia Cooperative Extension does not endorse these products and does not intend discrimination against other products that also may be suitable.
- 2021 Horticultural and Forest PMG - AuthorsAskew, Shawn D.; Baudoin, Antonius B.; Bergh, J. Christopher; Chamberlin, Lori; Dary, Eric R.; Del-Pozo, Alejandro; Derr, Jeffrey F.; Frank, Daniel; Hansen, Mary Ann; Hong, Chuan X.; Johnson, Charles S.; Laub, Curtis A.; McCall, David S.; Nita, Mizuho; Parson, Rachel; Peer, Kyle; Pfeiffer, Douglas G.; Richardson, Robert J.; Salom, Scott M.; Schultz, Peter B.; Wilson, James (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2021-02-12)Horticultural and Forest Crops 2021 Author Contact List
- 2022-2023 Mid-Atlantic Commercial Vegetable Production RecommendationsReiter, Mark S.; Samtani, Jayesh; Torres Quezada, Emmanuel; Singh, Vijay; Doughty, H.; Kuhar, Thomas P.; Sutton, Kemper; Wilson, James; Langston, David B.; Rideout, Steven; Parkhurst, James; Strawn, Laura K. (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2022-11-30)This copy of the 2022/2023 Mid-Atlantic Commercial Vegetable Production Recommendations replaces all previous editions of the Commercial Vegetable Production Recommendations published individually for Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. Information presented in this publication is based on research results from the University of Delaware, the University of Maryland, Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey, The Pennsylvania State University, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, West Virginia University, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, combined with industry and grower knowledge and experience. This publication will be revised biennially. In January 2023, a Critical Update with important updates for this publication will be communicated through local Extension Agents and Vegetable Specialists. The editors welcome constructive criticism and suggestions from growers and industry personnel who may wish to help improve future editions of this publication. These recommendations are intended for the commercial vegetable grower who has to make numerous managerial decisions. Although the proper choices of variety, pesticides, equipment, irrigation, fertilizer, and cultural practices are the individual vegetable grower’s responsibility, it is intended that these recommendations will facilitate decision-making. Recommended planting dates will vary across the six-state region. Local weather conditions, grower experience, and variety may facilitate successful harvest on crops planted outside the planting dates listed in this guide. This can be evaluated in consultation with the local agents and state specialists. Government agencies and other organizations administrating crop insurance programs or other support programs should contact local Extension agents and/or vegetable specialists for guidance. Not to be used by home gardeners.
- Effects of Some Selective Hemipteran-Targeting Insecticides and One Broad-Spectrum Insecticide on the Parasitoid Hadronotus Pennsylvanicus, 2018Boyle, Sean; Kuhar, Thomas P.; Wilson, James; Weber, Donald C. (Oxford University Press, 2022-01-01)
- Horticultural and Forest Crops: 2022 Pest Management GuideAskew, Shawn D.; Baudoin, Antonius B.; Bergh, J. Christopher; Chamberlin, Lori; Day, Eric R.; Del-Pozo, Alejandro; Derr, Jeffrey F.; Frank, Daniel; Hansen, Mary Ann; Hong, Chuan; Johnson, Charles S.; McCall, David S.; Nita, Mizuho; Parson, Rachel; Peer, Kyle; Pfeiffer, Douglas G.; Richardson, Robert J.; Salom, Scott M.; Wilson, James (Virginia Cooperative Extension, 2022-02-11)
- Paleontology Topic TrendsWilson, James; Martin, Joseph; Cruz, Rudy; Weiler, Eric (Virginia Tech, 2018-04-03)The purpose of the project was to run modern data analysis on abstracts created by the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology has a yearly convention in which members from all over the world gather together and present their studies from the appropriate year. Our client, Professor Sterling Nesbit, provided our group with a collection of abstracts dating back to 1987. Our job was to take all of the abstracts from each year and run analyses to see the trends and patterns spanning over all the years that the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology had been publishing abstracts in collections. The method the team has employed changed throughout the span of the project. In the beginning, the team planned on using Latent Dirichlet Allocation or LDA to summarize the abstracts. This would find the topics prevalent in the collection, and show the mix of those topics found in each of the abstracts. After further discussion with our client, the team decided on providing more straightforward analysis, based off graphing hierarchies in the abstracts. In order to properly run the graphing analysis on the abstracts our team had to scrape the abstracts to ensure the most useful data was not overlooked in the analysis. The process of scraping the abstracts began with removing all the hypertext markup tags from the abstract text files (which were converted from PDF). Then the team eliminated any English stop words in the text files to remove words that are not commonly needed for analysis. The next step was to customize and add words to this list of stop words, based on yearly differences. For example, in some years the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology required its members to create their abstracts referencing the United States as “The United States of America” while in other years they were required to reference it as “United States.” These slight changes required our team to alter our method of stop word elimination to be specific to each year. Once the scraping was done, the team created graphing scripts to produce graphs based off Vertebrate Paleontology hierarchies. After meeting with our client multiple times to further refine our analysis, we created the final analysis script version. These graphs helped our client visualize the patterns in findings made by the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. The project should be further developed to automatically extract abstracts from the convention’s PDF collection, as well as some sort of update to stop words based off of the society’s yearly modifications.