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Crop SciencesCollege of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences |
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Kevin L. Steffey
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Kevin Steffey is an Extension Specialist and Professor of Agricultural Entomology in the Department of Crop Sciences at the University of Illinois. He received his B.S. in entomology from Purdue University (1972), his M.S. in entomology from the University of Missouri (1975), and his Ph.D. in entomology from Iowa State University (1979). Kevin began his career in Illinois in 1979 and has focused his educational and applied research programs on insect management in corn, alfalfa, and other field crops. His research efforts have included numerous studies of corn rootworm management and control, studies of nonchemical methods of managing European corn borers (including transgenic Bt-corn), alfalfa insect management, and insect surveys of agricultural systems. He is the author or co-author of 22 peer-reviewed publications, 20 invited publications (including 6 book chapters), and more than 175 extension publications.
Kevin also is an active member of the Entomological Society of America (ESA). He has served on several committees, was the Chair of Subsection Ea (1992-93), and was elected as the North Central Branch representative to the Governing Board (1990-93). Currently he is a contributing editor for American Entomologist (Postmarked: Extension, USA), coordinating editor for the ESA Handbook of Corn Insects, Section E representative on the Editorial Board for the Journal of Economic Entomology, and President-Elect of the North Central Branch. At the annual meeting of the ESA in 1996, he was awarded the Distinguished Achievement Award for Extension Entomology.
All of my extension education programs are focused on management of insects in field and forage crops. My primary responsibility is to develop educational programs and materials and disseminate information that will enable growers in Illinois to manage insects economically and in an environmentally sound manner. Following is a list of extension programs for which I am responsible.
Coordinator, Illinois Agricultural Pest Control Handbook. This publication is a 400- to 500-page manual that includes considerable input from specialists in the departments of Agricultural Engineering, Crop Sciences, and Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences. It includes suggestions for management of insects, weeds, and plant diseases in field and forage crops, vegetables, stored grain, and livestock, as well as ample information about pesticides. The handbook is revised extensively each year.
Chair, Illinois Agricultural Pesticides Conference. This program has been conducted annually since 1949. I assumed the chair responsibilities in 1984. The conference is presented for anyone in agriculture who uses or recommends the use of pesticides in a crop pest management program. The program encourages the proper, timely, and wise use of pesticides within an integrated crop management system. Annual attendance is approximately 900 people.
The Proceedings of the Illinois Agricultural Pesticides Conference is a 200-page manual that contains the summaries of the presentations at the annual conference.
Executive Editor, Pest Management & Crop Development Bulletin. This newsletter is sent to approximately 3,000 subscribers each week during the growing season to inform agricultural professionals, including growers, about current pest problems and issues and provide timely and objective information about pest management tactics and crop development. The Bulletin is a compilation of articles submitted by specialists in the Department of Crop Science.
I conduct applied field research to support my extension programs, and all of my research has been conducted within a team format with colleagues and graduate students in the Department of Crop Sciences and the Illinois Natural History Survey. My primary research activities have been in the area of corn insect pest management, with focus upon corn rootworms and, more recently, European corn borers, Illinois' two key insect pests of corn. Past and current research efforts have focused upon the following:
I have no formal teaching appointment on campus at the University of Illinois. However, I have team-taught an extramural course, Management of Field Crop Insects, several times at different locations in the state.