eESPM
ESPM ESPM
CNR UCB
 

Miguel Altieri

Professor
Ph.D.  Entomology    University of Florida
  

215 Mulford Hall
Berkeley, California 94720
agroeco3@berkeley.edu
office: 510-642-9802   lab: 510-642-9802   fax:  510-643-5438

Web site         Recent publications      People
  Dr. Miguel  Altieri portrait
 

Biological control agro-ecology

Research Interests

Our research group uses the concepts of agroecology to obtain a deep understanding of the nature of agroecosystems and the principles by which they function. Throughout our research and writings we have aided in the emergence of agroecology as the discipline that provides the basic ecological principles for how to study, design, and manage sustainable agroecosystems that are both productive and natural resource conserving, and that are also culturally-sensitive, socially-just and economically viable. In particular, our research has focused on the ways in which biodiversity can contribute to the design of pest-stable agroecosystems. Several of our studies concentrate on elucidating the effects of intercropping, covercropping, weed management, and crop-field border vegetation manipulation on pest population density and damage and on the mechanisms enhancing biological control in diversified systems.

Our research has also extended into Latin America where the enhancement of biodiversity in agriculture can help the great mass of resource-poor farmers to achieve year-round food self-sufficiency, reduce their reliance on chemical inputs and develop agroecosystems that rebuild the production capacities of their small land holdings. Our approach has consisted of devising integrated farming systems emphasizing soil and water conservation, natural crop protection, and achievement of soil fertility and stable yields through integration of trees, animals, and crops. Much of this work is conducted through inter-institutional partnerships with NGOs, International Research Centers and Universities including networks such as SANE, ANGOC and CLADES, as well as international organizations such as UNDP and the CGIAR.

 
Understanding the ecological mechanisms underlying the sustainability of traditional vineyards intercropped with olives in Tuscany, Italy
Understanding the ecological mechanisms underlying the sustainability of traditional vineyards intercropped with olives in Tuscany, Italy

The Altieri Lab at UC Berkeley

Advances in Vineyard Agroecology: http://agroecology.berkeley.edu/

   

Current Projects

Our laboratory is involved in several field projects in California where we are testing ideas of landscape ecology applied to agriculture such as the use of biological corridors in pest management. The idea is to explore whether corridors can break the nature of monocultures by serving as a conduit for the dispersion of natural enemies within the field thus enhancing their impact on pest populations. The effects of summer cover crops on insect pest populations (grape leafhoppers, thrips and sharpshooters) and associated natural enemies is also being examined in vineyards. Of special interest is to determine whether timing mowing of cover crops in alternate rows can force movement of beneficials to adjacent vines to exert greater pest suppression.

Our group is also engaged in collaborative work with a number of Universities, NGOs and research centers in Africa, Asia and Latin America promoting research, training and capacity building in agroecology and sustainable agriculture.

 
Research fellow Clara Ines Nicholls training farmworkers on identification of biological control agents in Napa organic vineyards
Research fellow Clara Ines Nicholls training farmworkers on identification of biological control agents in Napa organic vineyards
Recent publications

Agroecology: The Science of Sustainable Agriculture [M. A. Altieri (1995) Westview Press, Boulder]

Biodiversity and Pest Management in Agroecosystems [M. A. Altieri (1994) Haworth Press, NY]

Crop Protection Strategies for Subsistence Farmers [M. A. Altieri (1993) Westview Press, NY]

Agroecology: Creating the Synergisms for a Sustainable Agriculture [M. A. Altieri (1995) UNDP Guidebook Series, NY]

Farmers, NGOs and lighthouses: learning from three years of training, networking and field activities (1998) UNDP Monograph, NY.

Genetic Engineering in Agriculture: the myths, environmental risks and alternatives. Food First Special Report 1. Oakland, California

Recent Teaching

98 - DIRECTED GROUP STDY
117 - Urban Garden Ecosystems
118 - Agricultural Ecology
184 - Agroforestry Systems
196A - Internship in ESPM--Field Module
197 - FIELD STUDY
198 - DIRECTED GROUP STDY
199 - SUPERV INDEP STUDY
298 - DIRECT GROUP STUDY
299 - INDIVIDUAL RESEARCH

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