Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.

CÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C. - BALZARINI, M. - ZOPPOLO, R. - ZARZA, H. - RODRÍGUEZ, E.M. - GRANVAL, N.I. - AMADO, I.

Resumen:

ABSTRACT.The growth of demand of organic products has increased the interest of growers all around the World. To reach a sustainable organic production system, growers have to go through a long and difficult process. Eighty-one successful organic production systems in the Southern Cone of America were evaluated regarding management practices, such as disease control, soil fertility, and biodiversity management. The aim of the study was to determine associations between production techniques, farmer training, experience in organic agriculture, yields obtained, and the contribution of organic production to the profitability of farmers. A multivariate analysis was performed to characterize the variability between systems, correlate the management variables and explain economic sustainability. The economic sustainability of farmers was highly correlated with self-production of fungicides and insecticides, use of permitted commercial fertilizers, organic matter application, the use of natural enemies, commercially permitted fungicides and insecticides and the implementation of preventive practices for disease management. Pest monitoring correlated significantly with farmer training and sustainable practices implementation. Farmer?s perception on the importance of crop diversity in organic production correlated with the importance of external inputs independence, green manure, cover crop, and the experience of farmers in organic production. Farmers who implemented more management practices had yield losses below 20% of total production and a gross margin of organic farming of more than 1.5 times the minimum wage of the country than farmers that implemented few or no management practices.Copyright © Canadian Center of Science and Education


Detalles Bibliográficos
2017
SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT
PREVENTIVE PRACTICES
BIODIVERSITY
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER
WEED CONTROL
Inglés
Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
AINFO
http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=57748&biblioteca=vazio&busca=57748&qFacets=57748
Acceso abierto
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author CÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C.
author2 BALZARINI, M.
ZOPPOLO, R.
ZARZA, H.
RODRÍGUEZ, E.M.
GRANVAL, N.I.
AMADO, I.
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author_facet CÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C.
BALZARINI, M.
ZOPPOLO, R.
ZARZA, H.
RODRÍGUEZ, E.M.
GRANVAL, N.I.
AMADO, I.
author_role author
bitstream.checksum.fl_str_mv 9a4be409fcea4c590427d40bdaa4b223
bitstream.checksumAlgorithm.fl_str_mv MD5
bitstream.url.fl_str_mv https://redi.anii.org.uy/jspui/bitstream/20.500.12381/2835/1/sword-2022-12-16T17%3a56%3a29.original.xml
collection AINFO
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv CÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C.
BALZARINI, M.
ZOPPOLO, R.
ZARZA, H.
RODRÍGUEZ, E.M.
GRANVAL, N.I.
AMADO, I.
dc.date.accessioned.none.fl_str_mv 2022-12-16T20:56:29Z
dc.date.available.none.fl_str_mv 2022-12-16T20:56:29Z
dc.date.issued.none.fl_str_mv 2017
dc.date.updated.none.fl_str_mv 2022-12-16T20:56:29Z
dc.description.abstract.none.fl_txt_mv ABSTRACT.The growth of demand of organic products has increased the interest of growers all around the World. To reach a sustainable organic production system, growers have to go through a long and difficult process. Eighty-one successful organic production systems in the Southern Cone of America were evaluated regarding management practices, such as disease control, soil fertility, and biodiversity management. The aim of the study was to determine associations between production techniques, farmer training, experience in organic agriculture, yields obtained, and the contribution of organic production to the profitability of farmers. A multivariate analysis was performed to characterize the variability between systems, correlate the management variables and explain economic sustainability. The economic sustainability of farmers was highly correlated with self-production of fungicides and insecticides, use of permitted commercial fertilizers, organic matter application, the use of natural enemies, commercially permitted fungicides and insecticides and the implementation of preventive practices for disease management. Pest monitoring correlated significantly with farmer training and sustainable practices implementation. Farmer?s perception on the importance of crop diversity in organic production correlated with the importance of external inputs independence, green manure, cover crop, and the experience of farmers in organic production. Farmers who implemented more management practices had yield losses below 20% of total production and a gross margin of organic farming of more than 1.5 times the minimum wage of the country than farmers that implemented few or no management practices.Copyright © Canadian Center of Science and Education
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=57748&biblioteca=vazio&busca=57748&qFacets=57748
dc.language.iso.none.fl_str_mv en
eng
dc.rights.es.fl_str_mv Acceso abierto
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:AINFO
instname:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
instacron:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT
PREVENTIVE PRACTICES
BIODIVERSITY
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER
WEED CONTROL
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Article
PublishedVersion
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type.version.none.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
description ABSTRACT.The growth of demand of organic products has increased the interest of growers all around the World. To reach a sustainable organic production system, growers have to go through a long and difficult process. Eighty-one successful organic production systems in the Southern Cone of America were evaluated regarding management practices, such as disease control, soil fertility, and biodiversity management. The aim of the study was to determine associations between production techniques, farmer training, experience in organic agriculture, yields obtained, and the contribution of organic production to the profitability of farmers. A multivariate analysis was performed to characterize the variability between systems, correlate the management variables and explain economic sustainability. The economic sustainability of farmers was highly correlated with self-production of fungicides and insecticides, use of permitted commercial fertilizers, organic matter application, the use of natural enemies, commercially permitted fungicides and insecticides and the implementation of preventive practices for disease management. Pest monitoring correlated significantly with farmer training and sustainable practices implementation. Farmer?s perception on the importance of crop diversity in organic production correlated with the importance of external inputs independence, green manure, cover crop, and the experience of farmers in organic production. Farmers who implemented more management practices had yield losses below 20% of total production and a gross margin of organic farming of more than 1.5 times the minimum wage of the country than farmers that implemented few or no management practices.Copyright © Canadian Center of Science and Education
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spelling 2022-12-16T20:56:29Z2022-12-16T20:56:29Z20172022-12-16T20:56:29Zhttp://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=57748&biblioteca=vazio&busca=57748&qFacets=57748ABSTRACT.The growth of demand of organic products has increased the interest of growers all around the World. To reach a sustainable organic production system, growers have to go through a long and difficult process. Eighty-one successful organic production systems in the Southern Cone of America were evaluated regarding management practices, such as disease control, soil fertility, and biodiversity management. The aim of the study was to determine associations between production techniques, farmer training, experience in organic agriculture, yields obtained, and the contribution of organic production to the profitability of farmers. A multivariate analysis was performed to characterize the variability between systems, correlate the management variables and explain economic sustainability. The economic sustainability of farmers was highly correlated with self-production of fungicides and insecticides, use of permitted commercial fertilizers, organic matter application, the use of natural enemies, commercially permitted fungicides and insecticides and the implementation of preventive practices for disease management. Pest monitoring correlated significantly with farmer training and sustainable practices implementation. Farmer?s perception on the importance of crop diversity in organic production correlated with the importance of external inputs independence, green manure, cover crop, and the experience of farmers in organic production. Farmers who implemented more management practices had yield losses below 20% of total production and a gross margin of organic farming of more than 1.5 times the minimum wage of the country than farmers that implemented few or no management practices.Copyright © Canadian Center of Science and Educationhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12381/2835enenginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAcceso abiertoSUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENTPREVENTIVE PRACTICESBIODIVERSITYSOIL ORGANIC MATTERWEED CONTROLSuccessful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.ArticlePublishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionreponame:AINFOinstname:Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuariainstacron:Instituto Nacional de Investigación AgropecuariaCÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C.BALZARINI, M.ZOPPOLO, R.ZARZA, H.RODRÍGUEZ, E.M.GRANVAL, N.I.AMADO, I.SWORDsword-2022-12-16T17:56:29.original.xmlOriginal SWORD entry documentapplication/octet-stream3016https://redi.anii.org.uy/jspui/bitstream/20.500.12381/2835/1/sword-2022-12-16T17%3a56%3a29.original.xml9a4be409fcea4c590427d40bdaa4b223MD5120.500.12381/28352022-12-16 17:56:29.79oai:redi.anii.org.uy:20.500.12381/2835Gobiernohttp://inia.uyhttps://redi.anii.org.uy/oai/requestlorrego@inia.org.uyUruguayopendoar:2022-12-16T20:56:29AINFO - Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuariafalse
spellingShingle Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
CÉSPEDES-LEÓN, C.
SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT
PREVENTIVE PRACTICES
BIODIVERSITY
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER
WEED CONTROL
status_str publishedVersion
title Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
title_full Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
title_fullStr Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
title_full_unstemmed Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
title_short Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
title_sort Successful organic production practices in the Southern Cone.
topic SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT
PREVENTIVE PRACTICES
BIODIVERSITY
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER
WEED CONTROL
url http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/consulta/busca?b=pc&id=57748&biblioteca=vazio&busca=57748&qFacets=57748