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LESSON 4: PEST CONTROL discovered the powerful insecticidal properties

of dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT).
4.1. PESTS AND PESTICIDES
DDT - cheap, stable, soluble in oil, and easily
PESTS - something or someone that annoys us, spread over a large area.
detracts from some resource that we value, or -highly toxic to insects, but relatively nontoxic to
interferes with a pursuit that we enjoy. mammals.
-its mass production started during World War II.
BIOLOGICAL PESTS  Paul Muller received Nobel prize in 1948 for the
- organisms that reduces the availability, quality, or discovery.
value of resources useful to humans.
Pesticide use has increased dramatically since
 Only about 100 species of organisms cause WWII.
90% of crop damage worldwide.  Almost nothing in 1950 to $33 bilion for 2.6
metric tons in 1999.
INSECTS are most frequent pests.  90% of pesticides are used in agriculture or
- make up three-fourths of all species on Earth. food storage and shipping.
 In US, household applications represent 12%
 Most pest organisms tend to be of all pesticide use, but almost 23% of
GENERALISTS - opportunistic species that insecticide use.
reproduce rapidly, migrate quickly into
disturbed areas that are pioneers in ecological By the 1960s, evidence began to accumulate that
succession. indiscriminate use of DDT and other long lasting
- compete effectively against specialized industrial toxins was having unexpected effects on
endemic species. wildlife.

PESTICIDES RACHEL CARSON (1962)


 PESTICIDE - chemical that kills/repels pests. -published Silent Spring; warns that POPs, such as
 BIOCIDE - kills wide range of organisms. DDT, pose a threat to wildlife, and to humans.
 HERBICIDE - kills plants.
 INSECTICIDE - kills insects. Most uses of DDT were banned in developed
 FUNGICIDE - kills fungi. countries in the late 1960s but it continues to be
 ACARICIDE - kills mites, ticks, and spiders. used in developing countries and remains the most
 NEMATICIDE - kills nematodes. prevalent contaminant on food imported to the
 RODENTICIDE - kills rodents. United States.
 AVICIDE - kills birds.
 OVICIDE - kills the eggs of pests. PESTICIDE TYPES
One way to classify pesticides is by their chemical
NOTE: Pesticides can be defined by their method structure.
of dispersal or their mode of action. 1. ORGANIC PESTICIDES
-include compounds of arsenic, sulfur, copper, lead,
Antibiotics used in medicine to fight infections are and mercury. These are generally highly toxic and
pesticides as well. essentially indestructible, remaining in the
environment forever.
PEST CONTROL HISTORY 2. NATURAL ORGANIC PESTICIDES
Using chemicals to control pests may well have - “botanicals”; generally are extracted from plants.
been among our earliest forms of technology. 3. FUMIGANTS
 Sumerians controlled insects with sulfur 5000 - generally small molecules such as carbon
years ago. tetrachloride, carbon disulfide, ethylene dichloride
 Chinese describe mercury and arsenic to amd dobromochloropropane that gasify easily and
control pests 2500 years ago. penetrate rapidly into a variety of materials.
 People have used organic compounds and 4. CHLORINATED HYDROCARBONS
biological controls for a long time. -fast acting and highly toxic to sensitive organisms.
 Romans burned fields and rotated crops to (DDT-mothballs)
reduce crop disease. -inhibit nerve membrane ion transport and block
MODERN PESTICIDES PROVIDE BENEFITS, nerve signal transmission.
BUT ALSO CREATE PROBLEMS -persistent - tend to biomagnify.
5. ORGANOPHOSPHATES
 The era of synthetic organic pesticides began -extremely toxic to mammals, birds, and fish.
in 1939 when Swiss chemist Paul Muller (Malathion)
-outgrowth of nerve-gas research. 4-nonylphenol - a powerful endocrine-hormone
-inhibit neurotransmitter enzyme. disrupter.
6. CARBAMATES
-similar to organophosphates. PESTICIDE RESISTANCE IS OFTEN RAPID AND
-Sevin: extremely toxic to bees WIDESPREAD
 Halogenated pyrroles - a new class of
compounds based on a naturally occuring  Resistant members of a population survive
microbial toxin, has been shown to educe egg pesticide treatment and produce more resistant
laying and egg survival in ducks at very low offspring.
concentration.  Pest Resurgence- is observed when pests
7. BIOLOGICAL CONTROLS previously targeted and successfully controlled
- are living organisms or toxins derived from them by pesticide recur, but in higher numbers than
used in place of pesticides. they did before.
 microbial agents
 Bacteria
 Parasitic wasps

PESTICIDE BENEFITS

DISEASE CONTROL
 Many insects serve as disease vectors or in the
transmission of a number of disease-causing
pathogens and parasites.
 Malaria, spread by the Anopheles mosquito, is
one of the largest causes of human disese and
premature death in the world. By controlling
mosquitoes, pesticides save millions of lives
per year on tropical countries.
 Some other related viral diseases such as
encephalitis and West Nile, also carried by
mosquitoes, and trypanosomiasis or sleeping
NOTE: Widespread use of crops genetically
sickness caused by protozoa transmitted by the
engineered to produce pesticides endogenously is
tsetse fly. Onchocerciasis (river blindness) and
likely to cause even more pesticides resistance.
filariasis are caused by tiny worms spread by
biting flies that afflict hundreds of millions of
PESTICIDE MISUSE CAN CREATE NEW PESTS
people in tropical countries.
 The worst side effect of broadcast spraying a
pesticide is that we kill beneficial predators that
WITHOUT PESTICIDES, WE MIGHT LOSE
previously kept a number of pests under
TWO-THIRDS OF CONVENTIONAL CROPS
control.
 Without modern chemical pesticides, these
 Under normal conditions many herbivoous
losses might be much higher
pests are controlled by natural predators.
 In some cases, insects and fungal diseases
 With advent of chemical pest controls, farmers
cause only small losses in terms of the total
have tended to abandon traditional methods of
crop quantity, but the cosmetic damage they
pest/pathogen control.
cause greatly reduces the economic value of
 Mixed crops and rotation regimes.
crops.
 A lack of understanding of the ways pesticides
CROP PROTECTION
adversely affect beneficial organisms is one
 Using pesticides, pre-harvest losses to disease
reason pest managers stick with
and pests are at 30%, with post-harvest losses
chemical-based system despite declining
at an additional 20-30%.
pesticide efficiency.
 In general, farmers save an average of $3-$5
for every $1 spent on pesticides.
SOME PERSISTENT PESTICIDES CAN MOVE
LONG DISTANCES IN THE ENVIRONMENT
PESTICIDE PROBLEMS
NON-TARGET SPECIES
 The qualities that make DDT and other
- up to 90% of the pesticides we use never reach
chlorinated hydrocarbons so effective-stability,
their intended targets
high solubility and high toxicity-also make them
- the effects of poisoning non-target species are
environmental nightmares.
immediate and unmistakable.
 Because chlorinated hydrocarbons (DDT) are 3. Flooding fields
so persistent, they tends to show up far from 4. Habitat diversification
the point of dispersal. 5. Growing in pest-free zones
 Stored in fat bodies, and thus tend to 6. Adjusting planting times
bioaccumulate. 7. Plant mixed polycultures
 High levels detected in upper levels of food
chain. Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)
 DDT banned rom US for over twenty years, but - naturally occuring bacterium that kills the larvae of
high levels still detected in some areas. butterfly and moth species but is generally harmless
to mammals.
In a study of human pesticide uptake and storge,
Canadian researchers found the levels of INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT USES A
chlorinated hydrocarbons in the breast milk of Inuit COMBINATION OF TECHNIQUES TO FIGHT
mothers living in remote arctic villages were five PESTS
times that of women from Canada’s industril region
some 2500 km to the south. Integrated pest management (IPM) is a flexible
ecologically based strategy that is applied at specfic
Grasshopper effect - compounds accumulate in times and aimed at specific crop and pests.
polar regions in which they evaporate from water - tries to minimize use of chemical controls and
and soil in warm areas and then condense and avoid broad spectrum controls.
precipitate in colder regions. - employs economic thresholds to determine the
point at which potential economic damage justifies
 Many persistent organic pollutants were pest control expenditures.
banned globally in 2001.
 Use was banned or restricted in developing Economic thresholds - the point at which potential
countries for years but between 1994 and 1996, economic damage justified pest control
the US shipped more than 100000 tons of DDT expenditures, and the precise time, type, and
and POPs annually. method of pesticide application is critical in IPM,
-Many returned to US in agricultural products
and migrating wildlife.

HUMAN HEALTH PROBLEMS

PESTICIDE EFFECTS ON HUMAN HEALTH CAN


BE DIVIDED INTO TWO CATEGORIES:

1. ACUTE EFFECTS
- including poisoning and illnesses caused by relatively
high doses and accidental exposures.
2. CHRONIC EFFECTS
- include cancer, birth defects, immunological problems,
endometriosis, neurological problems, Parkinson’s
disese, and other chronic degenerative diseases.

 WHO estimates between 3.5 and 5.0 million


people suffer acute pesticide poisioning, and
20000 die, each year.
 At least two-thirds resulting from occupational
hazards in developing countries.
 Long-term health effects difficult to conclusively
document.
NOTE: PCBs have been linked to learning
difficiencies in children. (Intake during mother’s
pregnancy)

ALTERNATIVES TO PESTICIDE USE

 BEHAVIORAL CHANGES
1. Crop rotation
2. Mechanical cultivation

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