Livestock Contacts

Cornell Cooperative Extension Office in Your Area

J. Keith Waldron
jkw5@cornell.edu
Livestock and Field Crops Coordinator

Ken Wise
klw24@cornell.edu
IPM Extension Area Educator for Eastern NY Livestock and Field Crops

Julianne Stavisky
js38@cornell.edu
IPM Extension Area Educator for Western NY Livestock and Field Crops

NYS IPM Fact Sheets for Livestock

Link Download
Integrated Management of Flies in and around Dairy and Livestock Barns, 1994  
Cattlelice, 1989 200k pdf file
Common Pest Flies Found in the Urban/Rural Environment and Their Biological Control Agents 704k pdf file
Pest Flies of Pastured Cattle and Horses 932k pdf file

See Also:

Cornell Cooperative Extension and Penn State Pest Management Recommendations for Dairy Cattle (184K pdf file)

Cornell Cooperative Extension and Penn State Pest Management Recommendations for Poultry (628K pdf file)

Cornell Cooperative Extension and Penn State Pest Management Recommendations for Horses (1 MB pdf file)

Cornell Cooperative Extension and Penn State Pest Management Recommendations for Sheep, Goats, Swine  (1.2 MB pdf file)

Reference Corner

About the Livestock & Field Crops Program

Have You Seen These Plant Pests? The Cooperative Agricultural Pest Survey (CAPS) needs your help in reporting agricultural crop pests.

New York Weekly Field Crop Pest Report This is a seasonal scouting report providing information on presence, identification, and management guidelines for significant field crop pests in New York. This report provides timely information to help users learn about, and better anticipate, current and emerging problems and improve their integrated pest management efforts.

Tactical Agriculture Program (TAg)
Learn, hands-on, IPM management techniques for field corn and alfalfa.

Publications Related to Livestock & Field Crops IPM

Cattle Recommends 2000 HTML PDF

Poultry Recommends 200 HTML PDF

IPM Training Modules: Tired of lecturing? Looking for a teaching kit that makes IPM easy? These modules are a hands-on, discussion-oriented series on the concepts and methods of IPM. It’s designed so you can mix and match modules to create the sequence that will work best for your clientele—or even use them singly, as needed, to augment your program.