Abstract

The aim of the conducted study was to characterize the attitudes and practices of Polish farmers in the area of performing chemical plant protection treatments. A particular attention was paid to identifying the relationship between the direction of changes in the volume of chemical plant protection product consumption and selected attributes of farms. The main time range of the analyses covered the period of 2013–2017. Statistical data and results of representative surveys carried out on a sample of 1101 farms in Poland were used in the research process. Due to the large number of variants of the analysed variables, a multiple correspondence analysis was used, which made it possible to determine the correlation between the examined features (direction of changes in pesticide use relative to the farm area, economic size of the farm and location of the farm). Statistical analysis showed the existence of strong relationships between the physical (1) and economic (2) size of farms and the direction of changes in pesticide consumption ((1) φ2 = 0.0907; (2) φ2 = 0.1141)). According to empirical studies, the reduction of pesticide consumption took place mainly on the smallest farms. The implementation of the integrated plant protection directive has not resulted in significant changes in the form of reduced pesticide use in large-scale field crops. This raises the need to modify the strategy and model of crop protection in large-scale field crops in Poland.

Highlights

  • Plant protection is an interdisciplinary field of knowledge, research and economic practice

  • In the European Union countries, integrated pest management is an obligation, and in relation to Poland, this requirement has been in force since 2014

  • There was no decrease in the use of pesticides in Poland, and until 2017, there was a systematic increase in the volume of their use

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Summary

Introduction

Plant protection is an interdisciplinary field of knowledge, research and economic practice. Chemical plant protection is an integral part of effective, conventional and integrated farming (Aktar et al 2009; Leong et al 2020). This is because pesticides make it possible to increase crop yields by reducing losses due to plant diseases, foraging insects that feed on these plants, etc. The popularity of pesticide use in farming is due to the fact that chemical plant protection is relatively cheap and effective (Lechenet et al 2017; Bernhardt et al 2017; Hedlund et al 2020). Much is expected after the development of biological methods in the field of plant protection, but still the effectiveness. The original online version of this article was revised: The y-axis legend of Figure 6 is cut-off in the original published paper.

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