Plant Biology (776) Expanded Course Description 11:776:408 TURFGRASS PEST SCIENCE



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Plant Biology (776) Expanded Course Description 11:776:408 TURFGRASS PEST SCIENCE (4 cr) Prerequisites and registration restrictions: 01:119:101 102 or 01:119:103 or 01:119:115 116 117; and 11:776:238 or 11:776:304; or by permission. Instructor and Contact information: Bruce Clarke, Rm 338 Foran Hall; 848-932-6295; clarke@aesop.rutgers.edu Albrecht Koppenhöfer, Rm 219 Blake Hall; 848-932-9324; koppenhofer@aesop.rutgers.edu Format: Face to face lecture and lab General course description/synopsis: Biology, ecology, etiology, and management of turfgrass pests including fungal, bacterial, and viral pathogens, insects, nematodes, vertebrates, and weeds; laboratory sessions focus on diagnostics of turfgrass pests and diseases. Course Learning Goals: By the end of the course students should be able to: 1. Describe the general principles of turfgrass entomology and pathology as well as the different types of detrimental and beneficial organisms that typically occur in a turfgrass ecosystem. 2. Identify the major pests and diseases of turfgrass and the symptoms and damage they cause. 3. Describe the concept of Integrated Pest Management (including cultural, biological, and chemical controls) and how it applies to turfgrass systems. 1

Assessment Measures: 1. Quizzes will be given every 2 3 weeks as well as a final exam and laboratory evaluations to measure student learning of general principles of turfgrass pests and pathogens, and concepts of IPM (Goals 1, 2 and 3). 2. Oral and written report is required as part of a special case studies project, as well as a final term paper assessing mastery of subject matter in turfgrass pest science (Goals 1, 2 and 3). Course Syllabus and Other information: Office Hours: By appointment; unannounced visits are subject to availability Class: Foran Hall II, Rm 194 Lectures: Tuesdays & Fridays 9:15-10:35 AM. Labs: Wednesdays 9:15 AM -12:15 PM. Quizzes: Lab: Six quizzes will be given (see syllabus). Students are required to hand in their work at the end of each lab period. Lab grades (10% of total grade) are subjective assessments of how well the student demonstrates a grasp of the assignment. Term Paper: Topics may be selected from the list provided on page 2. Graduate students must select topics from outside their major. A detailed outline of your paper is due 1 April. Papers are due 28 April; late papers will be penalized one grade per day. A hard copy of all term papers must be submitted on 28 April, as well as an electronic copy (sent to Clarke@aesop.rutgers.edu), or a disk saved as a MS Word file for subsequent analysis with plagiarism software. 2

Suggested Term Paper Topics (alternative topics may be selected but must be approved by the instructors): Status and key constraints for developing IPM programs for turfgrass. Management implications of white grubs in low vs. high maintenance turf. Strategies for preventing insecticide resistance in turfgrass management. Earthworms and golf course management: friend or foe? Regulatory issues impacting management of avian pests of turf. Attitudes and actions of golf course superintendents vs. homeowners in managing turf pests. Short and long-term impacts on turfgrass management of the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996. Strategies for preventing fungicide resistance in turfgrass management. Impact of greens construction on pest control. Influence of the new bentgrasses on disease management and fungicide usage on golf courses. Implications of current management practices on the occurrence and severity of stress-related diseases of turf. Status and implications of recent legislative initiatives to reduce or eliminate pesticide usage on turfgrass management in the future Control of snow molds without PCNB: management, economic, and regulatory implications for the golf course industry The influx of premix fungicides on disease management: impact on efficacy, resistance, and the turf managers ability to control turfgrass diseases Excellent Term Papers: Strive for depth, not breadth -- select your topic with great care. Do not rely solely on the internet for information. Utilize in depth papers from scientific and trade journals to fully cover the topic. Do not contain errors in grammar, punctuation, syntax, or spelling. Receive feedback from others followed by revision -- feedback helps identify those parts that work and those that don't. Show command of the relevant literature by recognizing the contributions of others with properly formatted citations (use Crop Sci. format for citations). Tend to be organized logically, with appropriate subheadings and good transitions between sections. Contain a summary at the end that restates the conclusions. Treat the facts and ideas objectively, noting strengths and weaknesses of the literature cited where appropriate. Offer a synthesis rather than merely a presentation of the facts; this is not a book report but a paper that provides an interpretive review of the subject. 3

SYLLABUS: Turf Pest Sci. (11:776:408) LECTURE OUTLINE -- SPRING, 2015 DATE LECTURE OR LABORATORY TOPIC INSTRUCTOR January 20 Tue Intro to Turfgrasses: Value, Benefits, Anatomy, & Physiology Clarke 21 Wed LAB: Turfgrass ID / Resistant Grasses Meyer/Pompei 23 Fri Integrated Pest Management Koppenhöfer 27 Tue Tactics I Koppenhöfer 28 Wed LAB: IPM & Chemical Pesticide Fundamentals Koppenhöfer 30 Fri Tactics II Koppenhöfer February 3 Tue Fundamentals of Entomology Koppenhöfer 4 Wed LAB: Insect Basics [Quiz #1] Koppenhöfer 6 Fri Leaf & Stem Chewing Pests Koppenhöfer 10 Tue Sucking Pests Koppenhöfer 11 Wed LAB: Insect Diagnostics Koppenhöfer 13 Fri Root-Infesting Pests I Koppenhöfer 17 Tue Root-Infesting Pests II Koppenhöfer 18 Wed LAB: Case Studies in Turfgrass Entomology [Quiz #2] Koppenhöfer 20 Fri Stem/crown burrowing insects Koppenhöfer 24 Tue Fundamentals of Nematology Koppenhöfer 25 Wed LAB: Biocontrol & Nematode Methodology Koppenhöfer 27 Fri Biology of Turf Nematodes I Koppenhöfer March 3 Tue Biology of Turf Nematodes II Koppenhöfer 4 Wed LAB: Nematode Diagnostics [Quiz #3] Koppenhöfer 6 Fri Innocuous/Annoying Invertebrates & Vertebrate Varmints Koppenhöfer 10 Tue In class review for exam 11 Wed NO LAB MID-TERM EXAM ---- 13 Fri Weed Management in Cool-Season Turf Mansue 17 Tue SPRING BREAK! ---- 18 Wed SPRING BREAK! ---- 20 Fri SPRING BREAK! ---- 4

24 Tue Fundamentals of Plant Pathology & Disease Management Clarke 25 Wed LAB: Disease Diagnostics Clarke 27 Fri Fungicide Resistance Management Strategies Clarke 31 Tue Cool Weather Diseases I Clarke April 1 Wed LAB: Microscope ID of Turf Pathogens I (Quiz #4/Outlines due) Clarke 3 Fri Cool Weather Diseases II Clarke 7 Tue Root Diseases: Ascomycota I Clarke 8 Wed LAB: Microscopic ID of Turf Pathogens II Clarke 10 Fri Foliar Diseases: Ascomycota II Clarke 14 Tue Foliar Diseases: Ascomycota III Clarke 15 Wed LAB: Case Studies in Turfgrass Pathology I [Quiz #5] Clarke 17 Fri Foliar Diseases: Basidiomycota Clarke 21 Tue Foliar Diseases: Deuteromycota I Clarke 22 Wed LAB: Case Studies in Turfgrass Pathology II Clarke 24 Fri Deuteromycota II Clarke 28 Tue Oomycota and Associated Pathogens [Paper Due] Clarke 29 Wed LAB: Field Trip [Quiz # 6] Clarke / Koppenhöfer May 1 Fri New and Emerging Diseases / Biological Control Clarke 5 Tue In class review for exam (optional) Clarke TBA FINAL EXAM (sometime between May 7 13) ---- Grading: Mid-Term Exam 25% Term paper 15% Quizzes (6) 25% Lab 10% Final Exam (Pathology section) 25% Borderline final grades are heavily influenced by student attendance and participation 5