Score infestation severity before losses spread through beds. Track trends across plots, seasons, and pests. Plan timely controls, protect beneficials, and reduce chemicals overall.
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| Scenario | Pest | Inspected | Infested | Damage (0–5) | Pests/plant | Humidity | Temp | Rain days | Expected category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early scouting | Aphids | 30 | 4 | 1.2 | 0.8 | 60% | 24°C | 2 | Low–Moderate |
| Hotspot forming | Whiteflies | 40 | 14 | 2.8 | 6 | 72% | 26°C | 5 | High |
| Widespread pressure | Caterpillars | 50 | 32 | 4.1 | 18 | 85% | 28°C | 9 | Severe–Critical |
These rows illustrate how incidence, damage, density, and risk can shift the result.
Best practice: track severity weekly to see whether controls are working. When severity is high or critical, confirm pest ID before treatment.
A severity index converts scattered observations into a repeatable number you can track. When different people scout different beds, a common scoring method reduces bias and makes changes visible. The calculator combines how many plants are affected, how strong the damage looks, pest density, and weather-driven pressure. This supports faster, defensible interventions and better records for future seasons.
Accuracy depends on how you sample. Inspect plants at edges and in the center because infestations often start along borders. Keep plant counts similar week to week and note the crop stage. If you inspect fewer plants after pruning or harvest, incidence can appear inflated. Use the same rating reference for damage so leaf curling, chlorosis, and fruit scarring are graded consistently.
Incidence highlights spread, while damage reflects plant response. Density captures how intense the population is, even before symptoms escalate. Thresholds in the calculator let you match local action levels; for example, aphids may need lower density thresholds than chewing caterpillars. If incidence is moderate but density is rising, focus on hotspots before they expand across beds.
Environment influences pest reproduction and plant stress. Higher humidity and warm mid-range temperatures can shorten life cycles for many insects, while frequent rain can disrupt beneficial insects or move pests between plants. The risk score is intentionally broad, so adjust weights when your site is protected, irrigated, or shaded. A rising risk score can justify tighter scouting intervals.
Use the category and index to select proportionate controls. Low results favor monitoring, sanitation, and removing infested leaves. Moderate results justify mechanical removal, trapping, and targeted biological releases. High to critical results require rapid containment: isolate affected sections, reduce excess nitrogen, and apply selective products that protect pollinators. Track the index after treatment to confirm improvement rather than relying on a single observation. Record the pest type, thresholds, and weights used, especially when comparing different crops. Export CSV for spreadsheets and attach PDFs to job logs to support audits, budgeting, and training. across teams and seasons.
It is a 0–100 score that summarizes infestation spread, visible damage, pest density, and weather pressure. Higher values indicate a greater chance of crop loss without timely, targeted management.
Use a consistent number that fits your bed size, often 20–60 plants. Sample edges and interior. More samples are needed when pests are patchy or when decisions involve spraying or releasing beneficials.
Yes. Adjust the density thresholds to match action levels for your crop and pest. Soft-bodied insects may need lower thresholds than chewing pests. Keep thresholds stable when comparing week-to-week trends.
Young seedlings and fruiting crops are more sensitive to feeding and disease transmission. The stage factor increases or reduces the index so the same pest level can trigger earlier action during vulnerable stages.
Treat it as an early-warning signal. If risk rises while field symptoms remain low, scout more frequently and focus on hotspots. Reduce risk with airflow, irrigation timing, and removing weeds that host pests.
No. It is an indicative cap that helps communicate urgency. Actual loss depends on pest species, crop variety, nutrition, and control timing. Use local guidance and your own historical records for calibration.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.