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Perception vs practice: Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley

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Perception vs practice: Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley. / Stetkiewicz, S.; Bruce, A.; Burnett, F.J. et al.
In: Crop Protection, Vol. 112, 31.10.2018, p. 96-102.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Stetkiewicz S, Bruce A, Burnett FJ, Ennos RA, Topp CFE. Perception vs practice: Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley. Crop Protection. 2018 Oct 31;112:96-102. Epub 2018 May 26. doi: 10.1016/j.cropro.2018.05.005

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Stetkiewicz, S. ; Bruce, A. ; Burnett, F.J. et al. / Perception vs practice : Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley. In: Crop Protection. 2018 ; Vol. 112. pp. 96-102.

Bibtex

@article{9515a934566441ad89093c3d1e0a8f08,
title = "Perception vs practice: Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley",
abstract = "Integrated Pest Management (IPM) offers a suite of ways by which to reduce the need for pesticide use, thus minimising environmental damage and pathogen resistance build-up in crop production. Farmers and agronomists active in the Scottish spring barley sector were surveyed to determine the extent to which they currently use or are open to implementing three IPM measures – varietal disease resistance, crop rotation, and forecasting disease pressure – in order to control three important fungal diseases. Overall, the survey results demonstrate that farmers and agronomists are open to using the three IPM techniques. However, gaps between actual and perceived recent practice were large: despite over 60% of farmers stating that they sowed varieties highly resistant to Rhynchosporium or Ramularia, less than one third of reportedly sown varieties were highly resistant to these diseases. Similarly, over 80% of farmers indicated that they used crop rotations, yet 66% of farmers also reported sowing consecutive barley often/always. Further research is needed in order to understand why these gaps exist, and how they can be reduced in future in order to increase IPM uptake and optimise pesticide use.",
keywords = "Integrated pest management, Farmer decision making, Disease resistance, Crop rotation",
author = "S. Stetkiewicz and A. Bruce and F.J. Burnett and R.A. Ennos and C.F.E. Topp",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.cropro.2018.05.005",
language = "English",
volume = "112",
pages = "96--102",
journal = "Crop Protection",
issn = "0261-2194",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perception vs practice

T2 - Farmer attitudes towards and uptake of IPM in Scottish spring barley

AU - Stetkiewicz, S.

AU - Bruce, A.

AU - Burnett, F.J.

AU - Ennos, R.A.

AU - Topp, C.F.E.

PY - 2018/10/31

Y1 - 2018/10/31

N2 - Integrated Pest Management (IPM) offers a suite of ways by which to reduce the need for pesticide use, thus minimising environmental damage and pathogen resistance build-up in crop production. Farmers and agronomists active in the Scottish spring barley sector were surveyed to determine the extent to which they currently use or are open to implementing three IPM measures – varietal disease resistance, crop rotation, and forecasting disease pressure – in order to control three important fungal diseases. Overall, the survey results demonstrate that farmers and agronomists are open to using the three IPM techniques. However, gaps between actual and perceived recent practice were large: despite over 60% of farmers stating that they sowed varieties highly resistant to Rhynchosporium or Ramularia, less than one third of reportedly sown varieties were highly resistant to these diseases. Similarly, over 80% of farmers indicated that they used crop rotations, yet 66% of farmers also reported sowing consecutive barley often/always. Further research is needed in order to understand why these gaps exist, and how they can be reduced in future in order to increase IPM uptake and optimise pesticide use.

AB - Integrated Pest Management (IPM) offers a suite of ways by which to reduce the need for pesticide use, thus minimising environmental damage and pathogen resistance build-up in crop production. Farmers and agronomists active in the Scottish spring barley sector were surveyed to determine the extent to which they currently use or are open to implementing three IPM measures – varietal disease resistance, crop rotation, and forecasting disease pressure – in order to control three important fungal diseases. Overall, the survey results demonstrate that farmers and agronomists are open to using the three IPM techniques. However, gaps between actual and perceived recent practice were large: despite over 60% of farmers stating that they sowed varieties highly resistant to Rhynchosporium or Ramularia, less than one third of reportedly sown varieties were highly resistant to these diseases. Similarly, over 80% of farmers indicated that they used crop rotations, yet 66% of farmers also reported sowing consecutive barley often/always. Further research is needed in order to understand why these gaps exist, and how they can be reduced in future in order to increase IPM uptake and optimise pesticide use.

KW - Integrated pest management

KW - Farmer decision making

KW - Disease resistance

KW - Crop rotation

U2 - 10.1016/j.cropro.2018.05.005

DO - 10.1016/j.cropro.2018.05.005

M3 - Journal article

VL - 112

SP - 96

EP - 102

JO - Crop Protection

JF - Crop Protection

SN - 0261-2194

ER -