Organic Farming of Vegetables

  • Olle M
  • Williams I
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
9Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Agriculture began organically. For many centuries, humans farmed without synthetic biocides or inorganic fertilizers, relying on organic fertilizers derived from plants and animals, and protecting crops from pests and diseases using naturally occurring materials. From the second half of the nineteenth century growers around the world successfully developed and re fi ned farming systems that relied on synthetic biocides or inorganic fertilizers. However, during the past two or three decades there has been a change once more towards organic cultivation. Here we review the effects of organic cultivation on the production quantity and quality characteristics of vegetables. Analyses of studies reported in the literature showed the following: (1) Organic cultivation affected the growth of vegetables positively in 43% of studies and negatively in 57% of studies. (2) Organic cultivation affected the yield of vegetables 59% positively, 29% negatively and 12% did not have any signi fi cant in fl uence. (3) Organically grown vegetables have, in most studies (65%), better nutritional value than conventionally grown ones; 20% were not signi fi cantly different and only in 15% was there a reduction in nutritional value. Nitrate levels were lower in 86% of studies with organic cultivation and greater in only 14% of studies. (4) Organic cultivation of vegetables uses a variety of methods for disease and insect control: hot water, hot air and electron treatment, biological seed treatment groups like microorganisms, plant extracts and inducers of resistance , solarization for nematode control, biopesticides, insect net. (5) Weed control is the most dif fi cult part of vegetable production in organic cultivation. (6) Ef fi cient methods against weeds are tillage, mulching, fl aming, hot water treatment. If the proper technology is used, the organic cultivation of vegetables is not so time-and money-consuming and produces vegetables of better quality and nutritional value with no pesticide residues.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Olle, M., & Williams, I. H. (2012). Organic Farming of Vegetables (pp. 63–76). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5449-2_4

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free