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{"config":{"lang":["en"],"separator":"[\\s\\-]+","pipeline":["stopWordFilter"],"fields":{"title":{"boost":1000.0},"text":{"boost":1.0},"tags":{"boost":1000000.0}}},"docs":[{"location":"","title":"GTBOP Webinar Archives","text":"<p>Getting the Best of Pests \u2014 Processed webinar archives for the UGA Center for Urban Agriculture.</p> <p>This site hosts the complete pipeline output for processed GTBOP webinar sessions: corrected transcripts, archive summaries, platform-optimized versions, Moodle course activities, prose transcripts, and collaborative writing resources.</p>","tags":["Home"]},{"location":"#series","title":"Series","text":"<ul> <li> <p>:material-leaf:{ .lg .middle } Green & Commercial</p> <p>Ornamental, turf, and landscape pest management for commercial and private pesticide applicators (Category 24/27).</p> <p>:octicons-arrow-right-24: Browse sessions</p> </li> <li> <p>:material-home-city:{ .lg .middle } Structural Pest Control</p> <p>Industrial, institutional, and structural pest management for licensed pest control operators (Category 35).</p> <p>:octicons-arrow-right-24: Browse sessions</p> </li> <li> <p>:material-pencil:{ .lg .middle } Writing Projects</p> <p>Collaborative writing resources derived from webinar content \u2014 bulletin outlines, reference compendia, and source guides.</p> <p>:octicons-arrow-right-24: Browse projects</p> </li> </ul>","tags":["Home"]},{"location":"#about-the-pipeline","title":"About the Pipeline","text":"<p>Each webinar is processed through a six-stage pipeline:</p> <ol> <li>Transcript Correction \u2014 Raw Whisper SRT corrected for technical terminology, speaker names, and domain vocabulary</li> <li>Archive Package \u2014 Narrative summary, YouTube timestamps, and Q&A pairs</li> <li>Platform Optimization \u2014 YouTube, website, and extension agent versions</li> <li>Moodle Activities \u2014 Quiz questions, matching exercises, and review prompts for certificate courses</li> <li>Prose Transcript \u2014 Corrected SRT converted to readable, structured markdown</li> <li>Writing Resources \u2014 Content reorganized into publication-ready toolkits</li> </ol> <p>All content derives from the corrected transcript as the authoritative source document. No external information is introduced at any stage.</p> <p>UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Webinar Series</p>","tags":["Home"]},{"location":"tags/","title":"Tags","text":"<p>Browse all archived sessions and resources by tag.</p>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:arboriculture","title":"Arboriculture","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Ryan Klein \u2014 Best Management Practices for Urban Trees </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:entomology","title":"Entomology","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 Tree Pests of the Southeast </li> <li> Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:graziosi","title":"Graziosi","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 Tree Pests of the Southeast </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:green--commercial","title":"Green & Commercial","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 Tree Pests of the Southeast </li> <li> Dr. Ryan Klein \u2014 Best Management Practices for Urban Trees </li> <li> Green & Commercial Series </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:home","title":"Home","text":"<ul> <li> Home </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:insecticides","title":"Insecticides","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action </li> <li> Insecticide Basics Bulletin \u2014 Writing Toolkit </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:klein","title":"Klein","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Ryan Klein \u2014 Best Management Practices for Urban Trees </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:scharf","title":"Scharf","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action </li> <li> Insecticide Basics Bulletin \u2014 Writing Toolkit </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:structural","title":"Structural","text":"<ul> <li> Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action </li> <li> Structural Pest Control Series </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:suiter","title":"Suiter","text":"<ul> <li> Insecticide Basics Bulletin \u2014 Writing Toolkit </li> </ul>"},{"location":"tags/#tag:writing-projects","title":"Writing Projects","text":"<ul> <li> Insecticide Basics Bulletin \u2014 Writing Toolkit </li> <li> Writing Projects </li> </ul>"},{"location":"green-commercial/","title":"Green & Commercial Series","text":"<p>Webinar archives for commercial and private pesticide applicators in the ornamental, turf, and landscape industries. Content serves Category 24 (Ornamental and Turf) and Category 27 (Right-of-Way) continuing education.</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial"]},{"location":"green-commercial/#processed-sessions","title":"Processed Sessions","text":"Date Speaker Topic Stages Jan 15, 2026 Dr. Ignazio Graziosi Tree Pests 1\u20135 Jan 15, 2026 Dr. Ryan Klein Urban Tree BMPs 1\u20135 <p>UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Green & Commercial Series</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial"]},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/","title":"Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 Tree Pests of the Southeast","text":"<p>Webinar Date: January 15, 2026 Speaker: Dr. Ignazio Graziosi, UGA Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources Moderator: Beth Horne, Extension Associate Series: Green & Commercial CEU Categories: Category 24 (Ornamental and Turf)</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial","Entomology","Graziosi"]},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/#deliverables","title":"Deliverables","text":"Deliverable Stage Description Archive Summary 2 Narrative summary, YouTube timestamps, Q&A Prose Transcript 5 Full presentation in readable prose Transcript Corrections 1 Correction log and verification YouTube Version 3 Character-limited YouTube description Website Version 3 Full web publication version Extension Agent Version 3 CEU-focused asynchronous version Quiz 4 Multiple choice assessment Matching 4 Term-to-definition exercises Review Prompts 4 Timestamp-linked review tasks Corrected SRT 1 Download corrected subtitle file <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial","Entomology","Graziosi"]},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/archive-summary/","title":"Archive Summary \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 2 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/corrections/","title":"Transcript Corrections \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 1 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/downloads/","title":"Downloads \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/downloads/#corrected-srt-file","title":"Corrected SRT File","text":"<p>Place the corrected SRT file in this folder alongside this page:</p> <pre><code>docs/green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 GTBOP_Transcript_2026-01-15_TreePests.srt \u2190 place here\n\u251c\u2500\u2500 downloads.md \u2190 this file\n\u2514\u2500\u2500 ...\n</code></pre> <p>MkDocs will serve the <code>.srt</code> file as a static asset. Link to it with:</p> <pre><code>[Download Corrected SRT](GTBOP_Transcript_2026-01-15_TreePests.srt)\n</code></pre> <p>File details: Update block count, time range, and filename below after placing the file.</p> Detail Value Filename <code>GTBOP_Transcript_2026-01-15_TreePests.srt</code> Blocks \u2014 Time range \u2014 <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/prose-transcript/","title":"Prose Transcript \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 5 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/","title":"GTBOP Moodle Quiz","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#understanding-tree-pests-disease-interactions-invasive-threats-and-management-strategies","title":"Understanding Tree Pests: Disease Interactions, Invasive Threats, and Management Strategies","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#dr-ignazio-graziosi-january-15-2026","title":"Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 January 15, 2026","text":"<p>Source: Corrected SRT transcript (Stage 1) + Archive Package (Stage 2) Questions: 15 Difficulty Distribution: 6 Recall (40%) | 6 Application (40%) | 3 Analysis (20%) Coverage: Disease triangle/decline spiral (Q1\u2013Q3), EAB (Q4\u2013Q8), CMBS (Q9\u2013Q12), Orange-striped oakworm (Q13\u2013Q15)</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-1","title":"Question 1","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 1:28 \u2013 2:32 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>According to Dr. Graziosi, the disease triangle describes the interaction of which three components that together cause tree damage?</p> <p>a) Pest, pathogen, and predator b) Pest, host tree, and environment c) Climate, soil, and genetics d) Insects, fungi, and nematodes</p> <p>Correct Answer: b Explanation: Dr. Graziosi introduced the disease triangle as the interaction of the pest, the tree (host), and the environment, emphasizing that the pest alone is not sufficient to cause damage. Source in transcript: ~2:04\u20132:32, blocks 33\u201335</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-2","title":"Question 2","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 3:02 \u2013 5:58 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>In the spiral of tree decline diagram, which of the following is classified as a predisposing factor?</p> <p>a) Defoliating insects b) Wood-boring insects c) Soil compaction d) Fungal pathogens</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi identified soil compaction as a predisposing factor in the outermost spiral, calling it \"often the number one issue for many trees.\" Defoliating insects are inciting factors, and wood-boring insects and fungi are contributing factors. Source in transcript: ~4:08\u20134:31, blocks 49\u201352</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-3","title":"Question 3","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 5:04 \u2013 6:06 Difficulty: Analysis</p> <p>Dr. Graziosi explained that in the spiral of tree decline, each spiral level contains factors that can \"cut through\" directly to tree death. What is the practical significance of this for a tree care professional?</p> <p>a) Only contributing factors can kill a tree b) A single stressor from any level can be severe enough to kill a tree on its own, without the other factors c) Trees can only die when all three levels of stressors are present simultaneously d) Predisposing factors must always precede inciting factors before decline begins</p> <p>Correct Answer: b Explanation: Dr. Graziosi specifically demonstrated that individual factors from any spiral level \u2014 for example, urban environment alone or soil compaction alone \u2014 can cut through the different layers and bring the tree directly to death, without requiring all other stressor levels to be present. Source in transcript: ~5:32\u20135:54, blocks 64\u201366</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-4","title":"Question 4","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 8:23 \u2013 9:10 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>Which of the following is a key diagnostic sign that a tree is being attacked by the emerald ash borer?</p> <p>a) Sooty mold on branches b) Skeletonized leaves c) Water sprouts on the trunk d) Pink egg masses on bark</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi described water sprouts as \"a very important diagnostic feature in order to understand if a tree is attacked by the emerald ash borer,\" noting they are the tree's desperate attempt to produce new growth in response to larval damage under the bark. Source in transcript: ~8:56\u20139:10, blocks 98\u2013100</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-5","title":"Question 5","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 10:04 \u2013 10:47 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>What is the characteristic shape of the exit hole left by an adult emerald ash borer emerging from a tree?</p> <p>a) Circular b) Oval c) D-shaped d) T-shaped</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi described the \"very characteristic, the famous D-shaped exit hole\" left when the adult beetle emerges from the tree. Source in transcript: ~10:11\u201310:15, block 110</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-6","title":"Question 6","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 10:48 \u2013 11:42 Difficulty: Application</p> <p>A landscape manager in southern Georgia discovers EAB in local ash trees and plans a treatment schedule based on a single annual emergence. Based on Dr. Graziosi's presentation, what important consideration might this manager be overlooking?</p> <p>a) EAB only emerges every two years in all locations b) A portion of the local EAB population may require two years to develop, meaning adults could emerge in both years c) EAB does not complete its life cycle in southern climates d) EAB only feeds on ash trees in northern states</p> <p>Correct Answer: b Explanation: Dr. Graziosi explained that while EAB is mostly a one-generation-per-year insect, there is always a portion of the population that requires two years to develop. This is more pronounced at northern latitudes but occurs in any location, and it is important to know when planning control. Source in transcript: ~10:48\u201311:42, blocks 116\u2013124</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-7","title":"Question 7","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 13:02 \u2013 13:46 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>According to the presentation, what was the single most important factor responsible for the rapid spread of the emerald ash borer across North America?</p> <p>a) Natural flight dispersal b) Nursery stock trade c) Movement of infested firewood d) Wind currents carrying adult beetles</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi identified firewood as the primary culprit, explaining that campers and travelers moved infested firewood, and researchers were able to connect the pattern of EAB spread closely with the highway and freeway system. Source in transcript: ~13:00\u201313:46, blocks 136\u2013141</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-8","title":"Question 8","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 15:26 \u2013 16:44 Difficulty: Application</p> <p>An arborist inventorying trees in a Georgia neighborhood finds that all the ash trees have been killed by EAB but notices white fringetrees appear healthy. Based on Dr. Graziosi's presentation, should the arborist be concerned about EAB affecting the white fringetrees?</p> <p>a) No, because white fringetrees are not in the same plant family as ash b) No, because EAB only attacks ash species c) Yes, because white fringetree was discovered to be an alternate host for EAB and could serve as a population reservoir d) Yes, but only if the white fringetrees are under drought stress</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi explained that in 2014 it was discovered that EAB could expand its host range to attack white fringetree (same family, Oleaceae). More importantly, white fringetree can function as a reservoir for EAB populations even after all ash trees in an area are gone. Source in transcript: ~15:26\u201316:44, blocks 162\u2013172</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-9","title":"Question 9","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 31:47 \u2013 33:28 Difficulty: Application</p> <p>A pest control operator inspects a crapemyrtle in December and finds both mature adult females and small mobile nymphs on the bark. Based on the presentation, is this finding unusual?</p> <p>a) Yes, all CMBS should be in a dormant stage during winter b) Yes, nymphs should only be present during summer months c) No, CMBS has overlapping generations, so multiple life stages can be present at any time of year d) No, but only adults should be present \u2014 the nymphs are likely a different insect</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi explained that CMBS can have up to five overlapping generations, meaning different stages of the insect can be found at any point. He showed a photo taken in Athens one month prior (winter) that contained both nymphs (crawlers) and adults. Source in transcript: ~33:10\u201333:47, blocks 327\u2013329</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-10","title":"Question 10","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 36:42 \u2013 37:17 Difficulty: Analysis</p> <p>Dr. Graziosi discussed urban heat island effects in relation to crapemyrtle bark scale. Which of the following best explains why urban heat islands create a \"double advantage\" for scale insects?</p> <p>a) Heat kills natural enemies while attracting more scales to the area b) Heat increases tree growth rate, providing more food for scales c) Heat stresses the host tree, increasing its susceptibility, while simultaneously accelerating the insect's development d) Heat causes scales to produce more sooty mold, which protects them from predators</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi described two specific effects of urban heat islands: first, it stresses trees, making them more susceptible to pests; second, it accelerates the development of the insect itself. He noted that scales are particularly good at taking advantage of urban heat. Source in transcript: ~36:57\u201337:21, blocks 363\u2013368</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-11","title":"Question 11","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 38:06 \u2013 38:29 Difficulty: Application</p> <p>A landscape company wants to use trunk injection of systemic insecticides to control a crapemyrtle bark scale infestation. Based on the presentation, what should they know?</p> <p>a) Trunk injection is the most effective method for CMBS control b) Trunk injection works but must be applied in fall c) Trunk injection is not a viable option because crapemyrtle absorbs systemic insecticides through the trunk very slowly d) Trunk injection is effective only on trees over 6 inches in diameter</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi specifically stated that chemical control of CMBS is complicated by the fact that crapemyrtle is not good at absorbing systemic insecticide through trunk injection, and that the chemical moves very slowly, making it not a viable option. Source in transcript: ~38:14\u201338:30, blocks 378\u2013380</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-12","title":"Question 12","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 38:31 \u2013 41:44 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>Which of the following is NOT one of the native predators Dr. Graziosi identified as feeding on crapemyrtle bark scale?</p> <p>a) Twice-stabbed lady beetle b) Green lacewing c) Bigeminal lady beetle d) Parasitoid wasp specialist from Asia</p> <p>Correct Answer: d Explanation: Dr. Graziosi identified three lady beetle species (twice-stabbed, bigeminal, and Harlequin) and green lacewings (particularly the red-lipped green lacewing) as predators of CMBS in North America. He specifically noted that no effective parasitoid had yet been found for CMBS in the US, unlike the situation in Asia. Source in transcript: ~38:48\u201341:00, blocks 385\u2013409</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-13","title":"Question 13","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 42:25 \u2013 43:35 Difficulty: Recall</p> <p>According to the presentation, the orange-striped oakworm moth primarily feeds on which group of trees?</p> <p>a) Ash species b) Crapemyrtles c) Red oaks, but also hickory, birch, and maple d) Pines and other conifers</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi described the orange-striped oakworm as a well-known pest of oaks, especially red oaks, but noted it can also feed on hickory, birch, and maple. Source in transcript: ~42:43\u201342:59, blocks 422\u2013423</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-14","title":"Question 14","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 44:51 \u2013 46:10 Difficulty: Analysis</p> <p>Dr. Graziosi discussed Nuttall oaks on the UGA Athens campus as an example of vulnerability to the orange-striped oakworm. What underlying principle does this example illustrate about urban tree pest management?</p> <p>a) Nuttall oaks are a non-native species poorly adapted to Georgia b) Monoculture plantings of clonal nursery stock create genetically uniform populations where susceptibility in one tree means susceptibility in all c) Nuttall oaks are particularly attractive to oakworm moths due to their leaf chemistry d) Older trees are always more resistant to defoliating insects than younger ones</p> <p>Correct Answer: b Explanation: Dr. Graziosi explained that urban trees often come from nurseries as clonal trees with very low genetic variability \u2014 \"they are basically the same tree.\" Therefore the susceptibility of one tree reflects the susceptibility of all trees of that clone on campus, making them uniformly vulnerable. Source in transcript: ~45:00\u201346:05, blocks 452\u2013460</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#question-15","title":"Question 15","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 47:56 \u2013 49:05 Difficulty: Application</p> <p>A homeowner calls about an oak tree losing leaves in late September to orange-striped oakworm caterpillars. About 30% of the canopy has been defoliated. Based on Dr. Graziosi's decision framework, what is the most appropriate recommendation?</p> <p>a) Immediately apply a broad-spectrum systemic insecticide via soil drench b) Apply Btk foliar spray urgently before the tree dies c) Consider that late-season defoliation is less harmful because the tree has already stored nutrients, and monitor rather than treat aggressively d) Remove and replace the tree, as 30% defoliation is always fatal</p> <p>Correct Answer: c Explanation: Dr. Graziosi outlined two key considerations: the 25% defoliation threshold distinguishes aesthetic from actual damage, and late-season defoliation (even if substantial) is less harmful because the tree has already stored its nutrients. A mature oak at 30% defoliation in late September, while above the threshold, benefits from the seasonal timing, suggesting monitoring may be more appropriate than aggressive chemical intervention. Source in transcript: ~48:05\u201348:44, blocks 482\u2013486</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_Quiz_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#verification-checklist","title":"Verification Checklist","text":"<ul> <li>[x] All 15 questions derived exclusively from presentation content</li> <li>[x] Timestamp references verified against corrected transcript</li> <li>[x] No external knowledge required to answer correctly</li> <li>[x] Difficulty distribution: 6 Recall / 6 Application / 3 Analysis</li> <li>[x] Coverage spans early (disease triangle), middle (EAB, CMBS), and late (oakworm) content</li> <li>[x] Answer keys unambiguous based on speaker's statements</li> <li>[x] Distractors plausible but clearly incorrect per presentation</li> <li>[x] No \"all of the above\" or \"none of the above\" options used</li> </ul>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/","title":"GTBOP Moodle Review Prompts","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#understanding-tree-pests-disease-interactions-invasive-threats-and-management-strategies","title":"Understanding Tree Pests: Disease Interactions, Invasive Threats, and Management Strategies","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#dr-ignazio-graziosi-january-15-2026","title":"Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 January 15, 2026","text":"<p>Source: Corrected SRT transcript (Stage 1) + Archive Package (Stage 2) Prompts: 6 timestamp-linked review tasks</p> <p>These short review tasks structure self-paced viewing by directing students to specific video segments and asking them to identify key points.</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-1","title":"Review Task 1","text":"<p>Watch: 1:28 \u2013 6:06 Task: Identify the three components of the disease triangle and the three levels of the spiral of tree decline. For each spiral level, list one example factor that Dr. Graziosi names. Key Points to Identify: - Disease triangle: pest, host tree, environment - Predisposing factors (e.g., soil compaction, urban environment, genetic potential) - Inciting factors (e.g., defoliating insects, drought) - Contributing factors (e.g., wood-boring insects, nematodes, Armillaria)</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-2","title":"Review Task 2","text":"<p>Watch: 8:23 \u2013 10:47 Task: Follow Dr. Graziosi's description of the emerald ash borer life cycle. List the diagnostic signs he describes for identifying an EAB-infested tree, and note the typical generation time. Key Points to Identify: - Larval galleries under bark disrupting phloem, cambium, and outer xylem - Water sprouts as a diagnostic feature - D-shaped exit holes from adult emergence - Primarily one generation per year, but a portion of the population takes two years</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-3","title":"Review Task 3","text":"<p>Watch: 18:20 \u2013 21:31 Task: Dr. Graziosi presents the invasion curve diagram. Describe how pest prevalence changes over time and explain why early detection matters for control options and cost. Key Points to Identify: - Introduction \u2192 low prevalence \u2192 exponential growth \u2192 carrying capacity (plateau) - Early: eradication may be possible; prevention effective - Late: only local control (individual tree protection); costs increase dramatically - Land managers become aware before the general public</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-4","title":"Review Task 4","text":"<p>Watch: 23:57 \u2013 28:00 Task: Describe the importation biological control program for EAB. Identify the three parasitoid wasp species' targets (what life stage each attacks) and explain why being specialists is an advantage. Key Points to Identify: - Two wasp species attack EAB larvae under bark (one uses vibrational cues and ovipositor to drill through bark) - One wasp species attacks EAB eggs - Specialists only attack EAB \u2014 won't waste their potential on other insects - Release technology: parasitized logs hung on trees; egg parasitoid released via small container (\"O-binator\")</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-5","title":"Review Task 5","text":"<p>Watch: 29:42 \u2013 38:30 Task: Compare crapemyrtle bark scale to the emerald ash borer in terms of: (a) host specificity, (b) available biological control, and (c) effectiveness of trunk injection. Note specific differences Dr. Graziosi highlights. Key Points to Identify: - CMBS is a generalist (feeds on apple, soybean, fig, beautyberry, St. John's wort in addition to crapemyrtle); EAB is more host-specific (ash + white fringetree) - No effective specialist parasitoid found for CMBS in the US; EAB has imported specialist parasitoids - Trunk injection not viable for CMBS (crapemyrtle absorbs poorly); trunk injection is a viable option for EAB in ash</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#review-task-6","title":"Review Task 6","text":"<p>Watch: 42:25 \u2013 49:19 Task: Explain Dr. Graziosi's two-part decision framework for determining whether to treat orange-striped oakworm. Then describe why clonal urban plantings are particularly vulnerable to this native pest. Key Points to Identify: - Part 1: Distinguish aesthetic vs. actual damage \u2014 threshold is ~25% defoliation - Part 2: Assess season \u2014 late-season defoliation less harmful (tree already stored nutrients) - Clonal nursery stock = low genetic variability = uniform susceptibility across all trees of the same clone - Urban heat island compounds the problem by accelerating insect development</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/GTBOP_ReviewPrompts_2026-01-15_TreePests_Graziosi/#verification-checklist","title":"Verification Checklist","text":"<ul> <li>[x] All review tasks reference specific, verifiable video segments</li> <li>[x] Key points match content actually presented in those segments</li> <li>[x] No external knowledge needed to complete tasks</li> <li>[x] Tasks progress through the full presentation (early \u2192 middle \u2192 late)</li> </ul>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/","title":"GTBOP Moodle Matching Exercises","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#understanding-tree-pests-disease-interactions-invasive-threats-and-management-strategies","title":"Understanding Tree Pests: Disease Interactions, Invasive Threats, and Management Strategies","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#dr-ignazio-graziosi-january-15-2026","title":"Dr. Ignazio Graziosi \u2014 January 15, 2026","text":"<p>Source: Corrected SRT transcript (Stage 1) + Archive Package (Stage 2) Exercises: 3 Total pairs: 26 (8 + 8 + 10)</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#matching-exercise-1-pest-ecology-and-interaction-scenarios","title":"Matching Exercise 1: Pest Ecology and Interaction Scenarios","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 7:22 \u2013 42:25 (spans all three case studies) Type: Species ID / Ecological Scenario</p> <p>Instructions: Match each pest in Column A with the correct ecological description from Column B. Two items in Column B are distractors and will not be used.</p> # Column A Column B 1 Emerald ash borer (EAB) a) Non-native pest attacking non-native host; overlapping generations complicate control; trunk injection ineffective 2 Crapemyrtle bark scale (CMBS) b) Native pest of native trees; clonal urban plantings increase vulnerability; late-season damage less harmful 3 Orange-striped oakworm moth c) Non-native pest attacking native host; co-evolved natural enemies in Asia keep populations low; firewood spread primary pathway 4 EAB parasitoid wasps (from Asia) d) Generalist predators that arrive late in season; do not maintain sustained populations on host trees 5 Lady beetles (twice-stabbed, bigeminal, Harlequin) e) Specialist biological control agents introduced by USDA; attack only their target pest; two species target larvae, one targets eggs 6 Green lacewing f) Non-native pest of native pines; larvae create pitch tubes on trunk 7 White fringetree g) Commercially available predator of CMBS; larvae are the most voracious stage; adults need sugar to feed; requires multiple releases per season 8 Blue ash h) Alternate host in family Oleaceae; serves as population reservoir for EAB even after ash trees are gone i) Native ash species showing some resistance to EAB; will die eventually but takes much longer than other ash species j) Native parasitoid that specializes exclusively on CMBS in North America <p>Answer Key: 1 \u2192 c, 2 \u2192 a, 3 \u2192 b, 4 \u2192 e, 5 \u2192 d, 6 \u2192 g, 7 \u2192 h, 8 \u2192 i</p> <p>Distractors: f (no pine pest discussed), j (Dr. Graziosi stated no effective specialist parasitoid for CMBS has been found in the US)</p> <p>Source in transcript: EAB section ~7:22\u201329:40; CMBS section ~29:42\u201342:25; Oakworm section ~42:25\u201349:19</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#matching-exercise-2-control-methods-by-pest","title":"Matching Exercise 2: Control Methods by Pest","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 22:34 \u2013 49:05 (control discussions across all three case studies) Type: Timing-Practice</p> <p>Instructions: Match each control method or strategy in Column A with the correct pest and application detail from Column B. Two items in Column B are distractors and will not be used.</p> # Column A Column B 1 Soil drench for EAB a) Target young larvae (early instars); minimal impact on natural enemies; often requires reapplication 2 Tree injection for EAB b) Apply in spring before leaves emerge 3 Trunk injection for CMBS c) Requires professional applicator; effective delivery method for systemic insecticides into ash 4 Soil drench / soil injection for CMBS d) Not a viable option \u2014 crapemyrtle absorbs systemic insecticides through the trunk very slowly 5 Foliar soaps for CMBS e) Recommended chemical methods; multiple products and brand names available 6 Btk foliar spray for oakworm f) Used to target crawlers (young mobile nymphs) 7 Importation biological control for EAB g) Specialist parasitoid wasps from Asia introduced after USDA risk assessment; attack larvae and eggs 8 \"Don't Move Firewood\" campaign h) Prevention strategy resulting from EAB invasion; also helps contain Asian longhorned beetle i) Apply systemic insecticide in late fall after leaves drop for maximum CMBS uptake j) Biological control using native generalist predators that fully suppress EAB without chemical assistance <p>Answer Key: 1 \u2192 b, 2 \u2192 c, 3 \u2192 d, 4 \u2192 e, 5 \u2192 f, 6 \u2192 a, 7 \u2192 g, 8 \u2192 h</p> <p>Distractors: i (no fall application timing was described for CMBS soil treatment), j (Dr. Graziosi stated native natural enemies alone are not enough for EAB and biological control has not been fully successful yet)</p> <p>Source in transcript: EAB chemical control ~22:34\u201323:42; EAB biocontrol ~23:57\u201327:30; CMBS chemical control ~37:28\u201338:30; CMBS biocontrol ~38:31\u201341:44; Oakworm control ~47:56\u201349:05; Firewood ~13:02\u201313:46</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#matching-exercise-3-spiral-of-tree-decline-and-disease-triangle-concepts","title":"Matching Exercise 3: Spiral of Tree Decline and Disease Triangle Concepts","text":"<p>Timestamp Reference: 1:28 \u2013 6:06 (framework), applied throughout presentation Type: Timing-Practice / Concept Application</p> <p>Instructions: Match each factor or concept in Column A with its correct classification or description from Column B as presented by Dr. Graziosi. Two items in Column B are distractors and will not be used.</p> # Column A Column B 1 Soil compaction a) Inciting factor in the spiral of tree decline 2 Defoliating insects b) Predisposing factor; described as \"often the number one issue for many trees\" 3 Wood-boring insects c) Contributing factor in the innermost spiral 4 Armillaria d) Contributing factor; a fungal genus in the innermost spiral 5 Genetic potential of the tree e) Predisposing factor in the outermost spiral 6 Drought f) The outcome at the center of the spiral diagram 7 Urban environment stress g) Predisposing factor; described as stressful for the tree 8 Nematodes h) Contributing factor listed alongside wood-boring insects and fungi 9 Death of the tree i) Inciting factor alongside defoliating insects 10 Urban heat island effect j) Stresses trees (increasing susceptibility) and accelerates insect development simultaneously k) A predisposing factor that only affects conifers l) An inciting factor that primarily affects root systems of aquatic plants <p>Answer Key: 1 \u2192 b, 2 \u2192 a, 3 \u2192 c, 4 \u2192 d, 5 \u2192 e, 6 \u2192 i, 7 \u2192 g, 8 \u2192 h, 9 \u2192 f, 10 \u2192 j</p> <p>Distractors: k (no conifer-specific predisposing factor discussed), l (no aquatic plant context discussed)</p> <p>Source in transcript: Spiral of decline ~3:02\u20136:06, blocks 40\u201368; Urban heat island ~36:42\u201337:21, blocks 363\u2013368</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/matching/#verification-checklist","title":"Verification Checklist","text":"<ul> <li>[x] All terms, definitions, and relationships derived directly from the presentation</li> <li>[x] No general textbook knowledge used \u2014 only speaker's content</li> <li>[x] Matching items unambiguous based on presentation content</li> <li>[x] Each exercise includes 2 plausible distractors</li> <li>[x] Timestamp references verified against corrected transcript</li> <li>[x] Answer keys correct and unambiguous per speaker's statements</li> <li>[x] Coverage spans all major presentation sections</li> </ul>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/quiz/","title":"Moodle Quiz \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/activities/review-prompts/","title":"Review Prompts \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/platforms/ext-agent/","title":"Extension Agent Version \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/platforms/website/","title":"Website Version \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-graziosi-tree-pests/platforms/youtube/","title":"YouTube Description \u2014 Graziosi, Tree Pests","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/","title":"Dr. Ryan Klein \u2014 Best Management Practices for Urban Trees","text":"<p>Webinar Date: January 15, 2026 Speaker: Dr. Ryan Klein, University of Florida, Arboriculture Moderator: Beth Horne, Extension Associate Series: Green & Commercial CEU Categories: Category 24 (Ornamental and Turf)</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial","Arboriculture","Klein"]},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/#deliverables","title":"Deliverables","text":"Deliverable Stage Description Archive Summary 2 Narrative summary, YouTube timestamps, Q&A Prose Transcript 5 Full presentation in readable prose Transcript Corrections 1 Correction log and verification YouTube Version 3 Character-limited YouTube description Website Version 3 Full web publication version Extension Agent Version 3 CEU-focused asynchronous version Quiz 4 Multiple choice assessment Matching 4 Term-to-definition exercises Review Prompts 4 Timestamp-linked review tasks Corrected SRT 1 Download corrected subtitle file <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>","tags":["Green & Commercial","Arboriculture","Klein"]},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/archive-summary/","title":"Archive Summary \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 2 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/corrections/","title":"Transcript Corrections \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 1 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/downloads/","title":"Downloads \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":""},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/downloads/#corrected-srt-file","title":"Corrected SRT File","text":"<p>Place the corrected SRT file in this folder alongside this page. MkDocs will serve it as a static asset.</p> Detail Value Filename <code>GTBOP_Transcript_2026-01-15_UrbanTreeBMPs.srt</code> Blocks \u2014 Time range \u2014 <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/prose-transcript/","title":"Prose Transcript \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 5 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/activities/matching/","title":"Matching Exercises \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/activities/quiz/","title":"Moodle Quiz \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/activities/review-prompts/","title":"Review Prompts \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/platforms/ext-agent/","title":"Extension Agent Version \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/platforms/website/","title":"Website Version \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"green-commercial/2026-01-15-klein-urban-tree-bmps/platforms/youtube/","title":"YouTube Description \u2014 Klein, Urban Tree BMPs","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"projects/","title":"Writing Projects","text":"<p>Collaborative writing resources derived from GTBOP webinar content. Each project reorganizes presentation material into publication-ready toolkits for subject matter experts.</p>","tags":["Writing Projects"]},{"location":"projects/#active-projects","title":"Active Projects","text":"Project Source Webinar Collaborators Status Insecticide Basics Bulletin Scharf \u2014 Insecticide MOA (Oct 2017) Dr. Dan Suiter, Dr. Michael Scharf In progress <p>UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Writing Projects</p>","tags":["Writing Projects"]},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/","title":"Insecticide Basics Bulletin \u2014 Writing Toolkit","text":"<p>Source Webinar: Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action (October 18, 2017) Collaborators: Dr. Dan Suiter (UGA), Dr. Michael Scharf (Purdue) Target Publication: UGA extension bulletin on insecticide classification and mode of action for pest control professionals</p>","tags":["Writing Projects","Insecticides","Scharf","Suiter"]},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/#how-this-toolkit-works","title":"How This Toolkit Works","text":"<p>This set of writing resources reorganizes Dr. Scharf's GTBOP presentation into a publication-ready structure. All content derives exclusively from the corrected transcript \u2014 no external information has been introduced.</p> Document Purpose Bulletin Outline Publication structure with content notes, transcript pointers, and writing notes Reference Compendium Consolidated tables of insecticide classes, active ingredients, MOA groups, and terminology Source Guide Maps publication sections to exact transcript locations and video timestamps","tags":["Writing Projects","Insecticides","Scharf","Suiter"]},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/#using-these-documents","title":"Using These Documents","text":"<p>The Outline is your drafting roadmap \u2014 it tells you what goes where and flags areas needing current updates with \u26a0\ufe0f markers. The Compendium is your quick-reference sheet for verifying classifications and relationships while writing. The Source Guide tells you exactly where to look in the video or transcript to verify any specific claim.</p> <p>\u26a0\ufe0f markers indicate content that may need updating since the 2017 presentation. These are flags for the subject matter experts, not corrections \u2014 the writing resources preserve what the speaker actually said.</p> <p>Source: GTBOP Structural Pest Control Series / Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture</p>","tags":["Writing Projects","Insecticides","Scharf","Suiter"]},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/compendium/","title":"Reference Compendium \u2014 Insecticide Basics","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 6 reference compendium here.</p> <p>Source: Dr. Michael Scharf, GTBOP Structural \u2014 October 18, 2017 Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/outline/","title":"Bulletin Outline \u2014 Insecticide Basics","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 6 bulletin outline here.</p> <p>Source: Dr. Michael Scharf, GTBOP Structural \u2014 October 18, 2017 Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"projects/insecticide-bulletin/source-guide/","title":"Source Guide \u2014 Insecticide Basics","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 6 source guide here.</p> <p>Source: Dr. Michael Scharf, GTBOP Structural \u2014 October 18, 2017 Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/","title":"Structural Pest Control Series","text":"<p>Webinar archives for licensed pest control operators. Content serves Category 35 (Industrial, Institutional, Structural and Health Related) continuing education.</p>","tags":["Structural"]},{"location":"structural/#processed-sessions","title":"Processed Sessions","text":"Date Speaker Topic Stages Oct 18, 2017 Dr. Michael Scharf Insecticide MOA 1\u20136 <p>UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Structural Pest Control Series</p>","tags":["Structural"]},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/","title":"Dr. Michael Scharf \u2014 Principles of Insecticide Classification and Mode of Action","text":"<p>Webinar Date: October 18, 2017 Speaker: Dr. Michael Scharf, Purdue University, Department of Entomology Moderator: Dr. Dan Suiter, Extension Entomologist, UGA Series: Structural Pest Control CEU Categories: Category 35 (Industrial, Institutional, Structural and Health Related)</p>","tags":["Structural","Entomology","Scharf","Insecticides"]},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/#deliverables","title":"Deliverables","text":"Deliverable Stage Description Archive Summary 2 Narrative summary, YouTube timestamps, Q&A Prose Transcript 5 Full presentation in readable prose Transcript Corrections 1 Correction log and verification YouTube Version 3 Character-limited YouTube description Website Version 3 Full web publication version Extension Agent Version 3 CEU-focused asynchronous version Quiz 4 Multiple choice assessment Matching 4 Term-to-definition exercises Corrected SRT 1 Download corrected subtitle file","tags":["Structural","Entomology","Scharf","Insecticides"]},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/#writing-resources","title":"Writing Resources","text":"Resource Description Bulletin Outline Publication structure mapped to presentation content Reference Compendium Consolidated tables of classifications, products, and terminology Source Guide Transcript-to-publication navigation map <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>","tags":["Structural","Entomology","Scharf","Insecticides"]},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/archive-summary/","title":"Archive Summary \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 2 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/corrections/","title":"Transcript Corrections \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 1 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/downloads/","title":"Downloads \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":""},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/downloads/#corrected-srt-file","title":"Corrected SRT File","text":"<p>Place the corrected SRT file in this folder alongside this page. MkDocs will serve it as a static asset.</p> Detail Value Filename <code>GTBOP_Transcript_2017-10-18_InsecticideMOA.srt</code> Blocks \u2014 Time range \u2014 <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/prose-transcript/","title":"Prose Transcript \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 5 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/activities/matching/","title":"Matching Exercises \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/activities/quiz/","title":"Moodle Quiz \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 4 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/platforms/ext-agent/","title":"Extension Agent Version \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/platforms/website/","title":"Website Version \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"},{"location":"structural/2017-10-18-scharf-insecticide-moa/platforms/youtube/","title":"YouTube Description \u2014 Scharf, Insecticide MOA","text":"<p>Placeholder \u2014 Paste your Stage 3 pipeline output here.</p> <p>Processed for UGA Center for Urban Agriculture / GTBOP Archives</p>"}]} |