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Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management

Each year, Africa loses half of its harvest to pests (insects, pathogens, nematodes, weeds). To offset these losses and improve food security, pest management needs to be revamped urgently. Based on a synthesis of all 58 pest management projects conducted by IITA in its 55-year history, we advocate...

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Autores principales: Neuenschwander, Peter, Borgemeister, Christian, De Groote, Hugo, Sæthre, May-Guri, Tamò, Manuele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10161365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37151684
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15116
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author Neuenschwander, Peter
Borgemeister, Christian
De Groote, Hugo
Sæthre, May-Guri
Tamò, Manuele
author_facet Neuenschwander, Peter
Borgemeister, Christian
De Groote, Hugo
Sæthre, May-Guri
Tamò, Manuele
author_sort Neuenschwander, Peter
collection PubMed
description Each year, Africa loses half of its harvest to pests (insects, pathogens, nematodes, weeds). To offset these losses and improve food security, pest management needs to be revamped urgently. Based on a synthesis of all 58 pest management projects conducted by IITA in its 55-year history, we advocate here for the implementation of the five following key climate-smart interventions, which have been shown to increase yields and decreasing CO(2) outputs compared to the current practices that are largely based on the use of synthetic pesticides: 1. Sanitation at the country's borders and at the field level is the most cost-efficient way to prevent pest damage and losses from exotic pests entering new territories. 2. Good soil management strengthens the crop plant and enhances the effectiveness of all other interventions. 3. Biological control is the quickest and in the long run most cost-effective way to control invading insect pests and weeds. 4. Resistant varieties are often the only way to control already established diseases and are a mainstay control method in combination with other practices. 5. Various bio-pesticides based on viruses, bacteria and fungi against insects have been commercialized or can be produced on-farm; they are to replace synthetic pesticides, which continue to have large negative impacts on the environment and human health. To apply these five practices, new decision-support and climate services tools should be used to empower low-literacy farmers to take timely decisions about pest control and to act as business partners. Meanwhile, all actors in the pest control community should account for their environmental costs, which up to now are born solely by the community, while profits from pesticide sales are pocketed privately. To successfully disseminate these practices across the continent, enhanced and harmonized policy support is required.
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spelling pubmed-101613652023-05-06 Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management Neuenschwander, Peter Borgemeister, Christian De Groote, Hugo Sæthre, May-Guri Tamò, Manuele Heliyon Research Article Each year, Africa loses half of its harvest to pests (insects, pathogens, nematodes, weeds). To offset these losses and improve food security, pest management needs to be revamped urgently. Based on a synthesis of all 58 pest management projects conducted by IITA in its 55-year history, we advocate here for the implementation of the five following key climate-smart interventions, which have been shown to increase yields and decreasing CO(2) outputs compared to the current practices that are largely based on the use of synthetic pesticides: 1. Sanitation at the country's borders and at the field level is the most cost-efficient way to prevent pest damage and losses from exotic pests entering new territories. 2. Good soil management strengthens the crop plant and enhances the effectiveness of all other interventions. 3. Biological control is the quickest and in the long run most cost-effective way to control invading insect pests and weeds. 4. Resistant varieties are often the only way to control already established diseases and are a mainstay control method in combination with other practices. 5. Various bio-pesticides based on viruses, bacteria and fungi against insects have been commercialized or can be produced on-farm; they are to replace synthetic pesticides, which continue to have large negative impacts on the environment and human health. To apply these five practices, new decision-support and climate services tools should be used to empower low-literacy farmers to take timely decisions about pest control and to act as business partners. Meanwhile, all actors in the pest control community should account for their environmental costs, which up to now are born solely by the community, while profits from pesticide sales are pocketed privately. To successfully disseminate these practices across the continent, enhanced and harmonized policy support is required. Elsevier 2023-04-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10161365/ /pubmed/37151684 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15116 Text en © 2023 International Institute of Tropical Agriculture https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Neuenschwander, Peter
Borgemeister, Christian
De Groote, Hugo
Sæthre, May-Guri
Tamò, Manuele
Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title_full Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title_fullStr Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title_full_unstemmed Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title_short Perspective article: Food security in tropical Africa through climate-smart plant health management
title_sort perspective article: food security in tropical africa through climate-smart plant health management
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10161365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37151684
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15116
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