4.5 Review

Control of crop diseases through Integrated Crop Management to deliver climate-smart farming systems for low- and high-input crop production

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 1, Pages 187-206

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.13493

Keywords

climate change; crop rotation; food security; intercropping; organic agriculture

Funding

  1. UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) [M028348/1, P00489X/1]
  2. UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy through the British Council Newton-Mosharafa [332392589]

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Crop diseases have a significant impact on food production globally, making it necessary to implement alternative climate-smart farming systems to increase yield and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Integrated Crop Management (ICM) strategies and breeding high-yielding cultivars adapted to future climates are crucial for addressing crop diseases and ensuring food security.
Crop diseases affect crop yield and quality and cause significant losses of total food production worldwide. With the ever-increasing world population and decreasing land and water resources, there is a need not only to produce more food but also to reduce agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to mitigate climate change and avoid land use change and biodiversity loss. Thus, alternative climate-smart farming systems need to adapt to produce more food per hectare in a more sustainable way than conventional high-input farming systems. In addition to breeding new high-yielding cultivars adapted to future climates, there is a need to deploy Integrated Crop Management (ICM) strategies, relying less on synthetic inputs for fertilization and crop protection and less on fossil fuel-powered machinery to decrease yield losses due to pest and pathogens and guarantee food security. In this review, we compare some low-input farming systems to conventional agricultural systems with a focus on ICM solutions being developed to reduce synthetic inputs; these include crop genetic resistance to pathogens, intercropping, canopy architecture manipulation, and crop rotation. These techniques have potential to decrease crop disease frequency and severity by decreasing amounts and dispersal of pathogen inoculum and by producing microclimates that are less favourable for pathogen development, while decreasing GHG emissions and improving environmental sustainability. More research is needed to determine the best deployment of these ICM strategies in various cropping systems to maximize yield, crop protection, and other ecosystem services to address trade-offs between climate change and food security.

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