Organic onion production with small farmers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33240/rba.v2i3.48898Keywords:
organic onion, Allium cepa, participative research, agroecology, organic agricultureAbstract
The objective was to develop of participative manner an organic onion production system with small farmers of Alto Vale do Itajaí region, Santa Catarina State, Brazil. Two plots of the production was carried out in two small farmers in the counties of Aurora and Rio do Sul. The research was carried out during 2004, 2005 and 2006. The agronomists of the agricultural extension and research public service provide to technical advice and support of manner that the knowledge of farmer was considered to generate the system of manner horizontal with interaction and collaboration between subjects. The yield alternated between 11 t.ha-1 and 15 t.ha-1, similar regional values to the small farmers by the 2 ha (15 t.ha-1), with low external input farming against system with high use in agrochemicals. The cost of organic onion was lower in external inputs, but demand more farm labor power with hand weeding. Although the maximum yield has not yet reached, the organic production use low external inputs and reduce impacts to the human health, environment and economic costs. The farmers deal the onion in local market and in São Paulo City with certification by audit and in participative process in developing. The farmers indicate the low farm family’s labor power availability, the requirement of certification and organization of the commercialization in groups, the fetters of the system. This work allowed the interaction between the agricultural extension and research public service, the small farmers and yours groups.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Copyright Notice
The copyright of articles published in this journal remains with the authors, with first publication rights for the journal.
License
When published in this open access journal, licensed through CC BY 4.0, articles are distributed free of charge and can be shared and adapted for any purpose, including commercial. As attribution of use, the license requires that due credit be given, with a link to the license and indication of changes. This does not mean that the licensor endorses the use of the information in the article, or the person who used this information. It also implies the impossibility of applying legal or technological measures that restrict the use of the information by third parties.