| Literature DB >> 27568588 |
Jay Ram Lamichhane1,2, Monika Bischoff-Schaefer3, Sylvia Bluemel4, Silke Dachbrodt-Saaydeh3, Laure Dreux1, Jean-Pierre Jansen5, Jozsef Kiss6, Jürgen Köhl7, Per Kudsk8, Thibaut Malausa9, Antoine Messéan1, Philippe C Nicot2, Pierre Ricci9, Jérôme Thibierge10, François Villeneuve11.
Abstract
EU agriculture is currently in transition from conventional crop protection to integrated pest management (IPM). Because biocontrol is a key component of IPM, many European countries recently have intensified their national efforts on biocontrol research and innovation (R&I), although such initiatives are often fragmented. The operational outputs of national efforts would benefit from closer collaboration among stakeholders via transnationally coordinated approaches, as most economically important pests are similar across Europe. This paper proposes a common European framework on biocontrol R&I. It identifies generic R&I bottlenecks and needs as well as priorities for three crop types (arable, vegetable and perennial crops). The existing gap between the market offers of biocontrol solutions and the demand of growers, the lengthy and expensive registration process for biocontrol solutions and their varying effectiveness due to variable climatic conditions and site-specific factors across Europe are key obstacles hindering the development and adoption of biocontrol solutions in Europe. Considering arable, vegetable and perennial crops, a dozen common target pests are identified for each type of crop and ranked by order of importance at European level. Such a ranked list indicates numerous topics on which future joint transnational efforts would be justified.Entities:
Keywords: European research networking; beneficials; biomolecules; biopesticides; innovation; integrated pest management; semiochemicals; sustainable agriculture
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27568588 DOI: 10.1002/ps.4423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pest Manag Sci ISSN: 1526-498X Impact factor: 4.845