Networking of integrated pest management: A powerful approach to address common challenges in agriculture
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
Integrated pest management (IPM) is facing both external and internal challenges. External challenges
include increasing needs to manage pests (pathogens, animal pests and weeds) due to climate change,
evolution of pesticide resistance as well as virulence matching host resistance. The complexity of
designing effective pest management strategies, which rely less heavily on the use of conventional
pesticides, is another external challenge. Internal challenges include organizational aspects such as
decreasing trend in budget allocated to IPM research, increasing scarcity of human expertise, lack of
knowledge transfer into practice and the communication gap both at country level and between
countries, and lack of multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary IPM research. There is an increasing awareness
that trans-national networking is one means to overcome such challenges and to address common
priorities in agriculture. A large number of stakeholders (researchers, policy makers, growers and industries)
are involved in the sector of crop protection, which needs to be coordinated through effective
communications and dynamic collaboration to make any IPM strategy successful. Here we discuss a
decade-long IPM networking experiences in Europe emphasizing how IPM research, implementation and
adoption in Europe may benefit from a broader level networking.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Common challenges; European networking; Long-term experiments; Knowledge transfer; Research priorities
List of contributors:
Sattin, Maurizio
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