Abstract
The use of ecological principles to manage plant pests has attracted renewed attention, but our knowledge related to the contributions of ecological pest management to social and natural sustainability is fragmented. In this study, we compared the performance and resilience of tea production and the economic benefits of tea ecological management (TEM) and tea conventional management (TCM). We show that TEM significantly improved tea biomass and quality, nutritional efficiency, and beneficial insects, but reduced seasonal variation. As a result, economic return increased by $8045/ha in the TEM mode compared to $6064/ha in the TCM mode. These results confirm that TEM is a promising production mode that can reconcile the conflict between the immediate and long-term service of agriculture. However, environmental improvements associated with organic pest control benefit society, and the government should provide adequate financial support to promote the production system.
Funder
Natural Science Foundation of Fujian province, China
Fujian Social Science Foundation
Education and Scientific Research Project for Young and Middle-Aged Teachers of Fujian Provincial Department of Education
Anxi County Science and Technology Project
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
Horticulture,Plant Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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