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Scientific evidence for sustainable plant disease protection strategies for the main arable crops in Sweden. A systematic map protocol

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TLDR
In this article, the authors compile scientific evidence for different plant disease protection strategies for the main arable crops grown in Sweden, including wheat, barley, oat, potato, sugar beet and oilseed rape.
Abstract
Efficient and sustainable plant protection is of great economic and ecological significance for global crop production. A number of challenges, e.g. climate change, population growth and global trade, put increasing demands on future crop production and crop protection. This necessitates an increase in crop productivity with less environmental impact while maintaining good food quality and food security. To meet these challenges, it is essential that the recommendations provided to growers are efficient and correct, which can only be ensured by evidence-based  recommendations based on outcomes from scientific studies. The aim of these systematic maps is to compile scientific evidence for different plant disease protection strategies for the main arable crops grown in Sweden. Six major crops (wheat, barley, oat, potato, sugar beet and oilseed rape) have been selected based on the area under production, the annual production, the economic importance, and the amount of pesticide used against diseases in these crops in Sweden. All methods to manage diseases will be considered, including cropping system, pesticide application, biological control methods, as well as combinations of methods and integrated pest management. These systematic maps will only deal with field studies of relevance for agricultural practices in Sweden, although we expect that the results will be applicable for northern Europe as a whole. The main outcome to be used will be productivity measured as yield per area. Plant health and pathogen reduction will be included as a proxy for potential increase in crop quality and yield. This will provide a systematic overview of the plant disease protection measures that have been reported in the scientific literature. The study will result in one searchable database per crop that may be used as a catalogue of evidence for researchers and stakeholders, especially authorities and advisory organizations. The systematic maps will aid in the identification of areas that need further research and guide funding agencies and policymakers when deciding where research resources should be allocated. It will also help to select topics for future systematic reviews and meta-studies within the field of plant protection.

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Eight principles of Integrated Pest Management.

J. Kiss, +2 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a dynamic and flexible approach that accounts for the diversity of farming situations and the complexities of agroecosystems and that can improve the resilience of cropping systems and our capacity to adapt crop protection to local realities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence based disease control methods in potato production: a systematic map protocol

TL;DR: In this paper , a global overview of plant disease protection measures available for potato production is presented, where the authors identify evidence clusters and knowledge gaps in potato disease management and identify future research areas, and in this way contribute to new and innovative solutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sustainable Management of Diseases in Horticulture: Conventional and New Options

Marco Scortichini
- 13 Jun 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors proposed a multi-stakeholder partnership strategy to promote sustainable crop protection using environmentally friendly biocontrol agents or natural products that show pathogen control capacity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Systematic Map of the Research on Disease Modelling for Agricultural Crops Worldwide

TL;DR: The authors developed a systematic map to identify and catalogue the literature pertaining to disease modelling for agricultural crops worldwide, and found that the number of papers reporting any type of disease model for 103 crops was more affected by the crop's economic value than by its cultivated area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scientific evidence of sustainable plant disease protection strategies for oats in Sweden: a systematic map

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a systematic map of oat disease management, which provides a database of scientific literature that can be used to develop sustainable disease management strategies for sustainable oat production.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

World Map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification updated

TL;DR: A new digital Koppen-Geiger world map on climate classification, valid for the second half of the 20 th century, based on recent data sets from the Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia and the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre at the German Weather Service.
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Ecological intensification: harnessing ecosystem services for food security

TL;DR: Research efforts and investments are particularly needed to reduce existing yield gaps by integrating context-appropriate bundles of ecosystem services into crop production systems.
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Crops that feed the world 6. Past successes and future challenges to the role played by maize in global food security

TL;DR: In this paper, the Green Revolution (GR) has played an outstanding role in feeding a hungry world and improving global food security, and it also generated its own environmental problems also productivity increase is now slow or static, and achieving the productivity gains needed to ensure food security will therefore require more than a repeat performance of the GR of the past, while the key challenges today is to replace these varieties with new ones for better sustainability.
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Climate change, plant diseases and food security: an overview

TL;DR: An overview of key constraints to food security uses fusarium head blight as a case study to illustrate key influences of climate change on production and quality of wheat, and outlines key links between plant diseases, climate change and food security.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating pests and pathogens into the climate change/food security debate

TL;DR: More mechanistic inclusion of pests and pathogen effects in crop models would lead to more realistic predictions of crop production on a regional scale and thereby assist in the development of more robust regional food security policies.
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