Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana

BACKGROUND: Agricultural pesticide use in sub-Saharan Africa has doubled over the past three decades, with a greater relative increase for fungicides. As pesticide inputs continue to rise, so does the potential for the development of resistance. Here, we report on a survey conducted to understand pe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Otoo, James, Musah, R., Olita, Toto, Ireland, Kylie B., Zerihun, Ayalsew
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95371
_version_ 1848766004018020352
author Otoo, James
Musah, R.
Olita, Toto
Ireland, Kylie B.
Zerihun, Ayalsew
author_facet Otoo, James
Musah, R.
Olita, Toto
Ireland, Kylie B.
Zerihun, Ayalsew
author_sort Otoo, James
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description BACKGROUND: Agricultural pesticide use in sub-Saharan Africa has doubled over the past three decades, with a greater relative increase for fungicides. As pesticide inputs continue to rise, so does the potential for the development of resistance. Here, we report on a survey conducted to understand pesticide resistance awareness, pesticide-use knowledge and practices of growers and agricultural extension officers (AEOs) in the cereals growing-belt of northern Ghana, with emphasis on fungicides. The results may inform development of strategies for improving pesticide literacy including resistance awareness, extension services and crop protection outcomes. RESULTS: The survey revealed a low level of pesticide-use knowledge for AEOs and growers. This was more so for growers with low education, predominantly women. Education level (and indirectly gender) influenced perceived effectiveness of fungicides and levels of adoption of cultural and agrochemical best practices. Only 28% of growers and 11% of AEOs practiced crop and fungicide rotations, respectively. More than half (53%) of the respondents indicated that fungicides used in northern Ghana are not effective. CONCLUSION: Given the low level of pesticide literacy of AEOs and growers, training programs on best practice for the use of pesticides, with targeted initiatives for female growers, would improve crop protection outcomes and safety. The limited adoptions of crop rotation and repeated use of fungicides with the same active ingredients, along with >50% of respondents reporting ‘fungicides not working’ suggest the potential presence of fungicide resistance cases in growers' fields in the Northern region of Ghana. Further work is needed to determine the incidence of resistance in the region. It is recommended that a key policy priority should focus on understanding broader agrochemical-use practices, crop losses and household-level food security in the presence of resistance risks. © 2024 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:44:15Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-95371
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language eng
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:44:15Z
publishDate 2024
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-953712024-08-15T03:37:29Z Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana Otoo, James Musah, R. Olita, Toto Ireland, Kylie B. Zerihun, Ayalsew Ghana crop and fungicide rotations extension officers gender perception of fungicide efficacy pesticide‐use literacy BACKGROUND: Agricultural pesticide use in sub-Saharan Africa has doubled over the past three decades, with a greater relative increase for fungicides. As pesticide inputs continue to rise, so does the potential for the development of resistance. Here, we report on a survey conducted to understand pesticide resistance awareness, pesticide-use knowledge and practices of growers and agricultural extension officers (AEOs) in the cereals growing-belt of northern Ghana, with emphasis on fungicides. The results may inform development of strategies for improving pesticide literacy including resistance awareness, extension services and crop protection outcomes. RESULTS: The survey revealed a low level of pesticide-use knowledge for AEOs and growers. This was more so for growers with low education, predominantly women. Education level (and indirectly gender) influenced perceived effectiveness of fungicides and levels of adoption of cultural and agrochemical best practices. Only 28% of growers and 11% of AEOs practiced crop and fungicide rotations, respectively. More than half (53%) of the respondents indicated that fungicides used in northern Ghana are not effective. CONCLUSION: Given the low level of pesticide literacy of AEOs and growers, training programs on best practice for the use of pesticides, with targeted initiatives for female growers, would improve crop protection outcomes and safety. The limited adoptions of crop rotation and repeated use of fungicides with the same active ingredients, along with >50% of respondents reporting ‘fungicides not working’ suggest the potential presence of fungicide resistance cases in growers' fields in the Northern region of Ghana. Further work is needed to determine the incidence of resistance in the region. It is recommended that a key policy priority should focus on understanding broader agrochemical-use practices, crop losses and household-level food security in the presence of resistance risks. © 2024 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry. 2024 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95371 10.1002/ps.8124 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ fulltext
spellingShingle Ghana
crop and fungicide rotations
extension officers
gender
perception of fungicide efficacy
pesticide‐use literacy
Otoo, James
Musah, R.
Olita, Toto
Ireland, Kylie B.
Zerihun, Ayalsew
Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title_full Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title_fullStr Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title_short Knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern Ghana
title_sort knowledge and perception of cereal farmers and extension agents on fungicide use in northern ghana
topic Ghana
crop and fungicide rotations
extension officers
gender
perception of fungicide efficacy
pesticide‐use literacy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/95371