A. Nasruddin, - and Ingeborg Menzler-Hokkanen, - and Heikki M. T. Hokkanen, - (2020) Beneficial Fungi for Promoting Plant Health in Cassava: Ecostacking Prospects for the Management of Invasive Pests. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.
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Abstract (Abstrak)
Innovative approaches to redesigning agricultural systems are urgently needed. A crucial way of “ecologically intensifying” agricultural production relies on designing cropping systems that mimic the diversity of natural ecosystems through lengthening and diversifying crop rotations and reducing tillage intensity (e.g. conservation agriculture). Minimal soil disturbance (reduced or no tillage) and permanent soil cover (mulch) combined with rotations facilitate to conserve, improve and make more efficient use of natural resources. These practices not only reduce soil degradation but also contribute to sustained agricultural production including biological control of pests and diseases. Plant pathologists have for a long time studied the concept of “suppressive soils”, trying to understand the mechanisms involved in plant disease suppression. We propose to expand the concept to “insect pest suppressive soils”, to apply this new concept, and to provide data on the occurrence and importance of soil-borne insect pathogens in pest population suppression. Agricultural fields usually harbor only low numbers of beneficial insect antagonists such as entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) and fungi (EPF), so that their role in pest population dynamics currently is negligible (Hokkanen and Menzler-Hokkanen 2018). Yet simple improvements in field and crop management can quickly increase the numbers of EPN and EPF to levels that will impact the peak pest populations.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | S Agriculture > S Agriculture (General) |
Depositing User: | - Andi Anna |
Date Deposited: | 14 Oct 2021 06:30 |
Last Modified: | 06 Nov 2024 04:51 |
URI: | http://repository.unhas.ac.id:443/id/eprint/8254 |