Authors
ET Lammerts van Bueren, PC Struik, E Jacobsen
Publication date
2002/7/1
Journal
NJAS: Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences
Volume
50
Issue
1
Pages
1-26
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Currently, organic farmers largely depend on varieties supplied by conventional plant breeders and developed for farming systems in which artificial fertilizers and agro-chemicals are widely used. The organic farming system differs fundamentally in soil fertility, weed, pest and disease management, and makes higher demands on product quality and yield stability than conventional farming. Organic farming systems aim at resilience and buffering capacity in the farm-ecosystem by stimulating internal self-regulation through functional agrobiodiversity in and above the soil, instead of external regulation through chemical protectants. For further optimization of organic product quality and yield stability new varieties are required that are adapted to organic farming systems. The desired variety traits include adaptation to organic soil fertility management, implying low(er) and organic inputs, a better root system and ability to …
Total citations
20022003200420052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024155643121111181611191519131111161110156
Scholar articles
ET Lammerts van Bueren, PC Struik, E Jacobsen - NJAS: Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences, 2002