Participants were taught techniques on how and where to set up rodent traps along the grassy area of the lowland rice plots at IRRI, Los Baños. |
Los Baños, Laguna -- A two-week training course on the
ecological management of rodents, insects, and weeds in agro-ecosystems is
being held at IRRI headquarters on 2-13 November.
Thirty participants from the Philippines, Myanmar,
Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam attended the training to gain
and apply their knowledge of the ecology of rice pests for better rice farm
management at a landscape level. They were trained in using decision tools to
analyze pest problems and determine processes and factors that influence
farmers’ decisions; applying field protocols
for monitoring insects, rodent and weeds; simple computer models; and the
principles for effective transfer of knowledge to extension officers, policymakers, and farmers.
IRRI scientists Grant
Singleton (rodent ecology), Virender Kumar (weed management), David Johnson
(weed ecology), Alex Stuart (rodent ecology), and Buyung Hadi (insect ecology)
provided their expertise as resource persons. They were joined by Professor Emeritus Charles
Krebs, population ecologist from the University of British Columbia, Canada.
“A strong
understanding of the population ecology of insect, rodent, and weed pests, and the
behavior of rodents and insects is important to effectively manage them,”
explains Dr. Singleton, coordinator of the Closing Rice Yield Gaps with Reduced Environmental Footprint (CORIGAP) project.
The first week’s activities included hands-on training on
spooling and radio-tracking of rodents and rat-trapping in various outdoor
settings at the IRRI experiment station—lowland rice fields, near screenhouses,
grassy plots, and at the base of long coconut trees. The students caught 30
rodent pests from just 95 traps. They were then taught how to take key body measurements
and examine in detail the breeding condition of the female rodents.
CORIGAP,
funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, organized the
training activity with the IRRI Training Center.
For more information on courses
offered by the Training Center, visit www.training.irri.org or contact
IRRITraining@irri.org.
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