Integrated Pest Management
Collaborative Research Support Program (IPM CRSP)

 
HOME ABOUT US WHAT WE DO SUCCESS STORIES LIBRARY RESEARCH & TECH. ASST. CAPACITY BUILDING TECH TRANSFER
 


Search IPM Website

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 IPM CRSP > Regional Programs > East Africa

IPM CRSP Regional Programs:

Eastern African Regional Integrated Pest Management (IPM) Project

IPM CRSP Uganda web site

The Regional Integrated Pest Management Collaborative Research Support Program (IPM/CRSP) for East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda will develop a shared IPM strategy to improve the productivity of higher value marketed horticultural crops in the region using a specialized program that is dedicated to ecologically based IPM research on horticultural crops. Ecological IPM is an approach to pest management that seeks to give farmers an alternative, more environmentally friendly path for sustaining high agricultural productivity.
 

Scientists and farmers examine tomatoes in a field in Uganda.

The IPM/CRSP will be implemented by a consortium of U.S. and East African institutions, with The Ohio State University (OSU) serving as the lead university and Virginia Tech as the management entity. A coordinating unit (CU) will be headquartered at Makerere University Faculty of Agriculture in Uganda and include member representatives from each participating nation. It will co-ordinate IPM research, training, extension and technology dissemination activities in the region.

Objectives
To develop a specialized, ecologically based IPM research program focused on priority pest constraints of selected higher value marketed horticultural crops.

The research program will:

  • Reduce higher-value horticultural crop losses due to pests

  • Reduce the use of pesticides to minimize adverse environmental impacts

  • Lower cost-of-production

  • Improve food safety and quality

  • Increase crop marketability and value

These objectives will be achieved by:

  • Implementing a participatory approach to IPM research and technology transfer;

  • Identifying emerging regional IPM research needs for priority horticultural crops;

  • Identifying effective IPM strategies to be shared throughout the region;

  • Developing an effective technology transfer and dissemination plan for reaching regional producers including women;

  • Developing a plan to enhance human resource capacity that will increase IPM research and training capabilities of the region;

Facilitating networking and institutionalization of IPM in the region.


USA Partners
The Ohio State University
Virginia Tech
Tennessee State University


Regional Partners
Makerere University Faculty of Agriculture
The Ugandan National Agricultural Research Organization
Kenyan Agricultural Research Institute (KARI)
Egerton University
Sokoine University of Agriculture
Tanzanian Coffee Research Institute

International Partners
The World Vegetable Center
International Center for Insect Physiology and Ecology

PI: Mark Erbaugh, The Ohio State University
E-mail:
erbaugh.1@osu.edu

 

Privacy Statement Sitemap Contact Us
 
  Office of International Research, Education, and Development, Virginia Tech,
Blacksburg, VA - 24061-0334