The annual Farm to Table Conference held in Memphis
at Rhodes College is designed to bring together farmers and those who buy and
use their produce. I conducted an introduction to beekeeping session attended
by a number of farmers considering adding bee hives for pollination. The
farmers conducting other sessions spoke along common themes: sustainable
agriculture, quality of produce, food security, and integrated pest management.
Sustainable agricultural practices include irrigation water usage and
conservation, soil erosion control, and soil moisture retention. Several
farmers spoke of the effects of climate change on farming practices. Climate
change especially affects water usage and plant variety selection. Certain
plant varieties known to be reliable in the past must now be replaced by a diversity
of varieties that thrive under new environmental conditions. Climate change
also affects planting dates, growing seasons, and harvest dates. To grow high
quality produce, the farmers stress testing for soil fertility, acidity, and
nutrients. Integrated pest management involves disease and pest prevention and
control. Specific crop pests must be identified, and broad-spectrum
insecticides should be avoided. Non-chemical controls include selection of
resistant plant varieties, crop rotation, removal of diseased plants, and
mulching between crop rows.
Robert Hayes, a New Albany, Mississippi blackberry
grower, who also manages bees to pollinate his berries, attracts hummingbirds
to his farm. Adult hummingbirds feed crop-damaging thirps and aphids to their
young birds, a biological pest control. Farmers recognize the need for
beneficial insects, particularly honey bees, to pollinate their crops. As well
as keeping honey bees, Hayes drills nesting holes in dead trees to make nesting
sites for blue orchard bees, effective native pollinators. My presentation to
the other farmers explored the reality of maintaining honey bees on today’s
farms. It is unfortunate that with the high level of annual colony losses
beekeeping can hardly be called sustainable agriculture. The farmers’ awareness
of agricultural practices that help and harm bees is important. Cool weather
today prevented honey bees from foraging elm trees in full bloom.
--Richard
Hello, thanks for this post on sustainable agriculture. Can you let me know what you meant by "broad-spectrum insecticides"?
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Alan,
ReplyDeleteBroad-spectrum insecticides kill all insects that come into contact with the chemical agent. These insecticides don’t discriminate between pest insects and beneficial insects. Broad-spectrum insecticides kill bees and native pollinators that are important for crop and seed production. Broad-spectrum insecticides also kill beneficial insects that are predators of pest insects. These beneficial insects serve as biological controls of pests.
--Richard