Can organic agriculture cope without copper for disease control? : synthesis of the collective scientific assessment report

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 118 pages
Poids : 601 g
Dimensions : 15cm X 21cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-2-7592-3838-5
EAN : 9782759238385

Can organic agriculture cope without copper for disease control?

synthesis of the collective scientific assessment report

chez Quae

Collection(s) : Matière à débattre et décider

Paru le | Broché 118 pages

Professionnels

Impression à la demande
26.00 Impression à la demande chez l'éditeur - Expédié sous 15 à 20 jours ouvrés
Ajouter au panier

Quatrième de couverture

Copper is used to control various fungal or bacterial diseases, mainly in grapes, in fruit production and in vegetable crops. It is the only active substance approved in organic farming with a strong fungicidal effect and a wide range of action. However, the demonstration of the negative environmental effects of copper, in particular on soil and water organisms, led to regulatory restrictions on use (capping of authorized doses), and even to its ban as a pesticide in some Northern European countries.

These increasing restrictions on the use of copper, which put growers who cannot use synthetic fungicides under severe constraints, led to a recurrent demand for 'alternatives'. Numerous experimental studies have therefore been carried out to identify and test other techniques : the use of disease-resistant varieties, the application of naturally-occurring substances that have a biocidal effect and/or stimulate the plant's natural defenses, the use of microbiological control agents, the adoption of prophylactic management, and the installation of physical protection. However, results remain scattered, and these control methods are rarely implemented in the field.

Resulting from a collective scientific assessment, this volume, first published in French in 2019, is a multidisciplinary and critical synthesis of the knowledge available on the subject. It describes and assesses the different techniques potentially effective against pathogens controlled by copper treatments, and insists upon the need to combine them in integrated crop protection systems.

Biographie

Didier Andrivon is Director of research at the Institute of Genetics, Environment and Plant Protection (IGEPP, Rennes) ; he is a former member of INRAE's Internal Committee on Organic Agriculture (CIAB), and a current member of the METABIO Steering committee.

Isabelle Savini is engineer ; she works at the Delegation for Collective Scientific Assessment, Foresight and Advanced Studies (DEPE, Paris) ; she was also a member of the CIAB.