Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions

Ensuring the sustainable production of potato is an important challenge facing agriculture globally. Insect pests are major biotic constraints affecting potato yields and tuber quality. The high pesticide uses to control them is of high human and environmental health concern, and it is expected that this will be further exacerbated through impacts of climate change. The chapter provides an overview of the geographical distribution of potato insect pests and their importance in tropical, subtropical, and temperate potato production regions. Climate change will potentially contribute to expand their geographical range of distribution, and increasing populations will lead to greater crop and post-harvest losses. Good progress has been made in applying insect pest modeling in pest risk analysis of potato pests to inform and create better awareness of future pest risks under climate change. Potato pests include some of the species which have evolved resistance to a wide variety of chemicals; and potato growers have already experienced the situation that available chemicals failed to control their targets. This chapter emphasizes the development, use, and adaptation of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) across all potato-growing regions of the world. Ultimately, this will lead to sustainable and more resilient potato production systems not overly dependent on pesticides. IPM requires a good knowledge and understanding of individual potato production systems; identifying pest species, knowing their biology and symptoms of infestation is essential for making educated decisions on their integrated management. To address this need, the chapter provides detailed information for a total of 49 insect pests of potato and the status quo of their management around the world.

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Main Authors: Kroschel, Jürgen, Mujica, N., Okonya, J., Alyokhin, A.
Format: Book Chapter biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2020
Subjects:solanum tuberosum, pest insects, pesticide resistance, climate change, integrated pest management, potatoes,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106184
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28683-5_8
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1061842023-12-08T19:36:04Z Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions Kroschel, Jürgen Mujica, N. Okonya, J. Alyokhin, A. solanum tuberosum pest insects pesticide resistance climate change integrated pest management potatoes Ensuring the sustainable production of potato is an important challenge facing agriculture globally. Insect pests are major biotic constraints affecting potato yields and tuber quality. The high pesticide uses to control them is of high human and environmental health concern, and it is expected that this will be further exacerbated through impacts of climate change. The chapter provides an overview of the geographical distribution of potato insect pests and their importance in tropical, subtropical, and temperate potato production regions. Climate change will potentially contribute to expand their geographical range of distribution, and increasing populations will lead to greater crop and post-harvest losses. Good progress has been made in applying insect pest modeling in pest risk analysis of potato pests to inform and create better awareness of future pest risks under climate change. Potato pests include some of the species which have evolved resistance to a wide variety of chemicals; and potato growers have already experienced the situation that available chemicals failed to control their targets. This chapter emphasizes the development, use, and adaptation of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) across all potato-growing regions of the world. Ultimately, this will lead to sustainable and more resilient potato production systems not overly dependent on pesticides. IPM requires a good knowledge and understanding of individual potato production systems; identifying pest species, knowing their biology and symptoms of infestation is essential for making educated decisions on their integrated management. To address this need, the chapter provides detailed information for a total of 49 insect pests of potato and the status quo of their management around the world. 2020 2019-12-17T03:35:12Z 2019-12-17T03:35:12Z Book Chapter Kroschel J., Mujica N., Okonya J., Alyokhin A. 2020. Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions. In: Campos H., Ortiz O. (eds) The Potato Crop. Its agricultural, nutritional and social contribution to humankind. Cham (Switzerland). Springer, Cham. ISBN: 978-3-030-28683-5. pp. 251-306. 9783030286828 9783030286835 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106184 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28683-5_8 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access 251-306 Springer
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic solanum tuberosum
pest insects
pesticide resistance
climate change
integrated pest management
potatoes
solanum tuberosum
pest insects
pesticide resistance
climate change
integrated pest management
potatoes
spellingShingle solanum tuberosum
pest insects
pesticide resistance
climate change
integrated pest management
potatoes
solanum tuberosum
pest insects
pesticide resistance
climate change
integrated pest management
potatoes
Kroschel, Jürgen
Mujica, N.
Okonya, J.
Alyokhin, A.
Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
description Ensuring the sustainable production of potato is an important challenge facing agriculture globally. Insect pests are major biotic constraints affecting potato yields and tuber quality. The high pesticide uses to control them is of high human and environmental health concern, and it is expected that this will be further exacerbated through impacts of climate change. The chapter provides an overview of the geographical distribution of potato insect pests and their importance in tropical, subtropical, and temperate potato production regions. Climate change will potentially contribute to expand their geographical range of distribution, and increasing populations will lead to greater crop and post-harvest losses. Good progress has been made in applying insect pest modeling in pest risk analysis of potato pests to inform and create better awareness of future pest risks under climate change. Potato pests include some of the species which have evolved resistance to a wide variety of chemicals; and potato growers have already experienced the situation that available chemicals failed to control their targets. This chapter emphasizes the development, use, and adaptation of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) across all potato-growing regions of the world. Ultimately, this will lead to sustainable and more resilient potato production systems not overly dependent on pesticides. IPM requires a good knowledge and understanding of individual potato production systems; identifying pest species, knowing their biology and symptoms of infestation is essential for making educated decisions on their integrated management. To address this need, the chapter provides detailed information for a total of 49 insect pests of potato and the status quo of their management around the world.
format Book Chapter
topic_facet solanum tuberosum
pest insects
pesticide resistance
climate change
integrated pest management
potatoes
author Kroschel, Jürgen
Mujica, N.
Okonya, J.
Alyokhin, A.
author_facet Kroschel, Jürgen
Mujica, N.
Okonya, J.
Alyokhin, A.
author_sort Kroschel, Jürgen
title Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
title_short Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
title_full Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
title_fullStr Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
title_full_unstemmed Insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
title_sort insect pests affecting potatoes in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions
publisher Springer
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106184
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28683-5_8
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