We formulate an integrated pest management model to control natural pests of
the crop through the periodic application of biopesticide and chemical
pesticides. In a theoretical analysis of the system pest eradication, a
periodic solution is found and established. All the system variables are proved
to be bounded. Our main goal is then to ensure that pesticides are optimized,
in terms of pesticide concentration and pesticide application frequency, and
that the optimum combination of pesticides is found to provide the most benefit
to the crop. By using Floquet theory and the small amplitude perturbation
method, we prove that the pest eradication periodic solution is locally and
globally stable. The acquired results establish a threshold time limit for the
impulsive release of various controls as well as some valid theoretical
conclusions for effective pest management. Furthermore, after a numerical
comparison, we conclude that integrated pest management is more effective than
single biological or chemical controls. Finally, we illustrate the analytical
results through numerical simulations.Comment: This is a preprint of a paper whose final and definite form is
published Open Access in 'Axioms' at [https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms12040391