CABI Publishing
Organic-Research.com – May, 2005 33N –36N
©CAB International 2005
Research Article
Approaches to pest management in organic agriculture:
a case study in European apple orchards
Paper presented at a symposium entitled “IPM in Organic Systems”, XXII International
Congress of Entomology, Brisbane, Australia, 16 August 2004
E. Wyss*, H. Luka, L. Pfiffner, C. Schlatter, G. Uehlinger and C. Daniel
Research Institute of Organic Agriculture, Ackerstrasse, CH-5070 Frick, Switzerland
*Author for correspondence: eric.wyss@fibl.ch
Abstract
Although the European organic agriculture movement was founded by
Rudolf Steiner and Hans Mueller in the years between 1924 and 1940, it
was not until the 1980s that pest management researchers began to
develop strategies to control pests in organic systems. Today, insect pest
management in organic agriculture involves the adoption of scientifically-
based and ecologically sound strategies as specified by international and
national organic production standards. These include a ban on synthetic
insecticides and, more recently, on genetically modified organisms
(GMOs). The first phase of an insect pest management program for
organic systems is the adoption of cultural practices including diverse
crop rotation, enhancement of soil quality by incorporation of specific
cover crops and/or the addition of soil amendments, and choice of
resistant varieties that help to prevent pest outbreaks. In the second
phase, habitat management (e.g. incorporation of hedgerows and wild
flower strips) is implemented to encourage populations of pest
antagonists. Third and fourth phases of the program include deployment
of direct measures such as biocontrol agents and approved insecticides.
However, the strategies for pest prevention implemented in the first two
phases often obviate the need for direct control measures. Approaches to
pest management in organic systems differ from those in conventional
agriculture conceptually in that indirect or preventative measures form
the foundation of the system, while direct or reactive control methods are
rare and must comply with organic production standards. The range of
European research activities that support these concepts is illustrated by
a case study of rosy apple aphid (Dysaphis plantaginea) control in organic
apple production in Switzerland.
Keywords: Dysaphis plantaginea: biological control: cultural control: environmental manage-
ment: insecticides: organic farming: pest management
1. Introduction
The European organic agriculture movement was
founded by Rudolf Steiner and Hans Mueller in the
years between 1924 and 1940. However, it was only
in the 1980s that Swiss and German pest manage-
ment researchers and organic farmers began to
develop concepts for controlling pests in organic sys-
tems. Later, these concepts found their way into the
general principles, which characterise organic agri-
culture and provide the ‘intended goals of organic
production and processing’ [1]. The principles that
underlie insect pest management in organic systems,
involve the adoption of scientifically-based and eco-
logically sound strategies which are specified by
international and national organic production
standards.
A simplified model shows how the concept of an
insect pest management program for organic sys-
tems can be developed (Fig.1). This pyramidal figure
shows how organic farming should be visualised: