Human and Technical Dimensions of Potato Integrated Pest Management Using Farmer Field Schools: International Potato Center and Partners’ Experience With Potato Late Blight Management

Author:

Ortiz Oscar1,Nelson Rebecca2,Olanya Modesto3,Thiele Graham4,Orrego Ricardo1,Pradel Willy1,Kakuhenzire Rogers15,Woldegiorgis Gebremedhin6,Gabriel Julio78,Vallejo Juan6,Xie Kaiyun9

Affiliation:

1. International Potato Center, Apartado, Lima, Peru

2. School of Integrative Plant Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

3. United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service, Eastern Regional Research Center, Wyndmoor, PA

4. CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas, led by the International Potato Center, Lima, Peru

5. Potato Program, National Agricultural Research Organization, Kabale, Uganda

6. Ethiopian Agricultural Research Organization, Holetta, Ethiopia

7. PROINPA Foundation, Cochabamba, Bolivia

8. State University of South of Manabí, Manabi, Ecuador

9. (Formerly) International Potato Center–China Center for Asia and the Pacific, Zhongguancun Nandajie, Beijing, China

Abstract

Abstract In the 1990s, the integrated pest management (IPM) team for potato late blight (IPM-late blight) at the International Potato Center (CIP) began to address the management of this complex potato disease by combining crop protection with social and behavioral sciences. Since the early 2000s, the team has worked with research and development organizations in countries in Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and South America to develop farmer discovery-based learning methods using farmer field schools (FFS). The principles of late blight control were more visible and understood by farmers when they could test options for managing late blight, particularly new potato clones with resistance to the disease, for themselves. CIP and partners have since adapted an approach combining FFS and participatory research to facilitate farmers’ access to information, knowledge, and technologies. Several manuals to implement FFS-IPM-late blight with farmers were subsequently developed. Results indicated that farmers using this approach learned new knowledge, assessed new potato clones, and changed crop management practices. Hence farmers realized a 32% average increase in potato productivity and income in Peru; similar changes occurred in other countries. The participatory research and training approach had a significant impact beyond IPM-late blight. In Peru and Bolivia, for example, more than 2,000 FFS were implemented between 2005 and 2012 on IPM for potato, other crops (coffee, cocoa, fruit trees), and livestock. In Uganda and Ethiopia, the experience expanded to potato seed management with the formation of seed cooperatives. Lessons have been drawn from this experience.

Funder

International Fund for Agricultural Development

Food and Agriculture of the United Nations

CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Insect Science,Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference48 articles.

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