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ABSTRACT |
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TITLE: |
Integrated Vegetation Management - The Exploration of a Concept to Application |
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AUTHOR(S): |
Kevin T. McLoughlin
- Kevin.Mcloughlin@nypa.gov |
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With the seminal "Position Paper”
issued (first released as an internal working paper format in
the
early 1990s) by the member utilities of the New York Power Pool entitled
“Application of Integrated Pest Management to Electric Utility
Right-of-Way
Vegetation Management in New York State” the phrase Integrated Vegetation
Management (IVM) was utilized, defined, and described in detail
as
being a more functional term. This IPM/IVM Position Paper described
how many commonly accepted Integrated Pest Management (IPM) precepts
(tactics and program elements) are incorporated into contemporary
electric transmission right-of-way (ROW) vegetation management
programs
in New York State. As a result, the acronym IVM has since become
synonymous with ROW vegetation management and is now used throughout
the industry
as an ambiguous descriptive term for virtually all ROW vegetation
management activities. Unfortunately, the term IVM means different
things to different people. The deployment of herbicides to achieve
many of the goals and objectives of an authentic IVM program needs
to be based upon the appropriate principles and practices of the
much more rigorously established IPM body of knowledge. In order
to gain
scientific credibility and regulatory and pubic acceptance the entire
concept of IVM (as a distinct subset of IPM) needs to be thoroughly
“thought out” so that all its various assumptions and premises are
easily recognized and the benefits to be derived
from the application of IVM are transparent to all. This paper
will attempt to evaluate the original IPM/IVM Position Paper and
focus
on the rationale for the changes that have been made (and those that
haven’t) in the revised 2000 edition of this IPM/IVM Position Paper.
The concepts espoused in the IPM/IVM Position Paper have now been
subject to nearly 10 years of application experience and thus a
more
detailed understanding of how well the various ROW vegetation management
practices qualify under the rubric of commonly accepted IPM (IVM)
principles is needed. Keywords: Rights-of-way, ROW, vegetation management, integrated
pest management, IPM, integrated vegetation management, IVM, herbicides,
pesticides |
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