Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 October 2008
The discrepancy between farmers' performances and research-based recommendations in the control of cotton pests in Southern Malawi is discussed. Analysis of the former in two seasons revealed that the farmers' low levels of insecticide application approached the economic optimum, whereas several factors of economic importance were omitted from the research-based justification of high spraying levels. Recommendations for improving the applicability of research recommendations to smallholder farming are made, with particular reference to the farming risks that arise from uncertain rainfall, the wide range of farming ability encountered in practice, and the dangers of atypically high levels of management in research experiments.