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Book (stand-alone)Pollination services for sustainable agriculture 2008
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No results found.Pollinators are essential for orchard, horticultural and forage production, as well as the production of seed for many root and fibre crops. Pollinators such as bees, birds and bats affect 35 percent of the world’s crop production, increasing outputs of 87 of the leading food crops worldwide. Food security, food diversity, human nutrition and food prices all rely strongly on animal pollinators. The consequences of pollinator declines are likely to impact the production and costs of vitamin-rich crops like fruits and vegetables, leading to increasingly unbalanced diets and health problems. Maintaining and increasing yields in horticultural crops under agricultural development is critically important to health, nutrition, food security and better farm incomes for poor farmers. In the past, pollination has been provided by nature at no explicit cost to human communities. As farm fields have become larger, and the use of agricultural chemicals has increased, mounting evidence points to a p otentially serious decline in populations of pollinators under agricultural development. -
Brochure, flyer, fact-sheetPesticide risk reduction - Revised version 2017
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No results found.FAO promotes Integrated Pest Management (IPM) as the preferred, ecologically-based approach to growing healthy crops, which reduces pesticide use only as needed and when adhering to measures that limit the exposure of people and the environment to them. IPM enhances natural pest control mechanisms. FAO has reduced the risks from pesticide use for millions of farmers as a result of hands-on training using Farmer Field Schools (FFS). They aim to build the capacity of smallholder farmers for ecolog ical pest management. -
Book (stand-alone)Review of existing legislation to protect pollinators from pesticides in selected countries 2022
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No results found.This review is intended to contribute background information to the FAO Global Seminar on Strengthening Regulations to Protect Pollinators from Pesticides to be held in February 2022, within the context of capacity building related to Phase III of the African, Caribbean and the Pacific Countries (ACP) Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) Programme (abbreviated ACP MEAs 3).
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