The upscaling and out-scaling of ecological intensification: how smallholder farms can inform the science of managing biocontrol at scale

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Advisors/Reviewers

Further Contributors

Contributing Institutions

Publisher

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

License

Quotable link

DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.22029/jlupub-18447

Abstract

Current objectives to harness agroecological functioning to improve the biological control of crop pests are conditional on a range of ecological, social, economic and cultural mechanisms that may hinder or support the success of such endeavours. Against the backdrop of ongoing work focused on the push-pull technology, a mixed cropping strategy aiming to increase biocontrol in smallholder farms of Sub-Saharan Africa, we review some key challenges and knowledge gaps associated with enhancing and managing biocontrol practices on farms. While major knowledge gaps exist with regard to ecological processes affecting biocontrol success at small to large scales, these can quickly be trumped in terms of capacity for implementation by non-ecological factors such as the structure of social systems and the existence and effectiveness of training networks. We argue that it is our responsibility to formulate questions for biocontrol research that lead to effective, adaptable and resilient solutions for the real-world contexts in which they should be implemented. Consequently, research aiming to understand ecological processes for improved biocontrol must be increasingly transdisciplinary and leave a wide margin for flexible application of ecologically-driven principles.

Link to publications or other datasets

Description

Notes

Erschienen in: Book of Abstracts, 52nd Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of Germany, Austria and Switzerland, Leipzig – 12-16 September 2023

Original publication in

Original publication in

Anthology

Forschungsdaten

Series

Citation