Snap bean pests and diseases in Sumapaz, Colombia: their present status and implications

Initial studies on snap bean production in Sumapaz, Colombia, indicated excessive use of pesticides in the region. A more in- depth investigation of how chemicals are used to control insects and diseases, and the economic and agroecological implications was thus initiated in 1989. It was found that reliance on pesticides was largely related to the disease susceptibility of the most popular variety grown, Lago Azul. Of the farmers surveyed, 90 percent sprayed their crops once a week with a mixture of 1-2 pesticides, 2-3 fungicides and a foliar fertilizer. Indiscriminate application of insecticides appears to have little, if any, effect on yields, but a destructive effect on natural enemies of leafminer. So far, though, snap beans tested for chemical residues from the region have shown no appreciable levels of contamination. (AS)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Velásquez, J.G., Prada, P., Henry, Guy
Format: Conference Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 1990
Subjects:phaseolus vulgaris, snap beans, trialeurodes vaporariorum, liriomyza huidobrensis, slugs, colletotrichum lindemuthianum, pseudomonas syringae, phoma, uromyces phaseoli, whetzelinia sclerotiorum, bacterial diseases, diptera, diseases and pathogens, homoptera, injurious insects, mycoses, noxious animals, pests, habichuela (erythrina), babosas,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/55950
http://ciat-library.ciat.cgiar.org/Articulos_Ciat/Digital/38639-38661_International_%20Conference_%20on_%20Snap%20_Beans_%20in_%20the_%20Developing_%20World._%20Cali,_%20Colom.pdf#page=206
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