Vol. 51 No. 3 (2012)
Review

Helping farmers face the increasing complexity of decision-making for crop protection

Vittorio ROSSI
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Tito CAFFI
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
Francesca SALINARI
Horta srl

Published 2012-11-02

Keywords

  • integrated pest management,
  • decision-making,
  • disease models,
  • decision support tools

How to Cite

[1]
V. ROSSI, T. CAFFI, and F. SALINARI, “Helping farmers face the increasing complexity of decision-making for crop protection”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 457–479, Nov. 2012.

Abstract

The European Community Directive 128/2009 on the Sustainable Use of Pesticides establishes a strategy for the use of plant protection products (PPPs) in the European Community so as to reduce risks to human health and the environment. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is a key component of this strategy, which will become mandatory in 2014. IPM is based on dynamic processes and requires decision-making at strategic, tactical, and operational levels. Relative to decision makers in conventional agricultural systems, decision makers in IPM systems require more knowledge and must deal with greater complexity. Different tools have been developed for supporting decision-making in plant disease control and include warning services, on-site devices, and decision support systems (DSSs). These decision-support tools operate at different spatial and time scales, are provided to users both by public and private sources, focus on different communication modes, and can support multiple options for delivering information to farmers. Characteristics, weaknesses, and strengths of these tools are described in this review. Also described are recently developed DSSs, which are characterised by: i) holistic treatment of crop management problems (including pests, diseases, fertilisation, canopy management and irrigation); ii) conversion of complex decision processes into simple and easy-to-understand ‘decision supports’; iii) easy and rapid access through the Internet; and iv) two-way communication between users and providers that make it possible to consider context-specific information. These DSSs are easy-to-use tools that perform complex tasks efficiently and effectively. The delivery of these DSSs via the Internet increases user accessibility, allows the DSSs to be updated easily and continuously (so that new knowledge can be rapidly and efficiently provided to farmers), and allows users to maintain close contact with providers.

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