Title: Chapter 23 The Pesticide Dilemma
1Chapter 23The Pesticide Dilemma
2Overview of Chapter 23
- What is a Pesticide?
- Major Kinds of Pesticides
- Benefits and Problems With Pesticides
- Risks of Pesticides to Human Health
- Alternatives to Pesticides
- Laws Controlling Pesticides Use
- The Manufacture and Use of Banned Pesticides
3What is a Pesticide
- Broad spectrum pesticide
- A pesticide that kills a variety of organisms,
not just the targeted organisms
- First generation pesticide
- Inorganic compounds
- Lead and mercury
- Botanicals- plant derived pesticides
- Nicotine and pyrethrin
4What is a Pesticide
- Second generation pesticide
- Synthetic poison
- Ex DDT
5Major Groups of Insecticides
- Chlorinated Hydrocarbons
- Organic compound containing Chlorine
- Ex DDT
- Slow to degrade and persist in the environment
- Banned or largely restricted
- Organophosphates
- Organic compounds that contain phosphorus
- Most poisonous insecticide
- Do not persist as long as chlorinated
hydrocarbons - Cabamates
- Derived from cabamic acid
6Major Kinds of Herbicides
- Selective Herbicides
- Kill only certain types of plants
- Can be classified to the type of plant they kill
- Broad-leaf herbicides
- Grass herbicides
- Ex 2,4-D
7Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Benefit Disease control
- Fleas, lice and mosquitoes carry disease
- Malaria- mosquito born
- 2.7 million people die each year
- Few drugs available, so focus is on killing
mosquitoes - DDT
8Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Benefit Crop Protection
- Pests eat and destroy 1/3 of worlds crops
- Farmers save 3 to 5 for every 1 they invest in
pesticides - Problem Evolution of Genetic Resistance
- Pest populations are evolving resistance to
pesticides (right)
9Pesticide Resistance
- Pesticide Treadmill
- Cost of applying pesticide increases
- Because they must be applied more frequently or
in larger doses - While their effectiveness decreases
- Because of increased genetic resistance in pests
- Resistance Management
- Strategies for managing genetic resistance in
order to maximize the period in which a pesticide
is useful - Delays the evolution of genetic resistance
- Refuge of untreated plants
10Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Imbalances the Ecosystem
- Spraying to kill insects can affect birds,
rabbits, etc. - Despite 33-fold increase in pesticides since the
1940s, crop loss has not really changed
11Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Creation of New Pests
- Infestation of red scale insects on lemons after
DDT sprayed to control another pest
12Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Persistence, Bioaccumulation, and
Biological Magnification - Persistence
- Do not degrade readily into less harmful
compounds - Linger in the environment
- Bioaccumulation
- The buildup of a persistent pesticide or other
toxic substance in an organisms body
13Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Persistence, Bioaccumulation, and
Biological Magnification
- Biological magnification
- Increased concentration of toxic chemicals in
tissues of organisms at higher trophic levels - Ex Peregrine falcons (right)
14Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Persistence, Bioaccumulation, and
Biological Magnification
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (aka POPs) are
- chemicals that last for years in the environment
- build up in humans and other animals
- move around the world on wind and water currents
- This class of chemicals, which included many
pesticides, has been targeted for elimination by
international treaty.
15Benefits and Problems with Pesticides
- Problem Mobility in the Environment
- Do not stay where they are applied
- Move through soil, water and air
16Risk of Pesticides to Human Health
- Short-term Effects of Pesticides
- Handling food with pesticide residue
- Mild case nausea, vomiting, headaches
- Severe case damage to nervous system,
17Risk of Pesticides to Human Health
- Long-term Effects of Pesticides
- Cancer- lymphoma
- Breast cancer
- Sterility
- Miscarriage
- Birth defects
- Decreases bodys ability to fight infection
- Potential connection to Parkinsons disease
18Alternatives to Pesticides
- Using cultivation methods to control pests
- Interplant mixtures of plants (alternating rows)
- Strip cutting
- Proper timing of planting, fertilizing, and
irrigating - Crop rotation
- Biological Control
- Use of naturally occurring disease organisms,
parasites or predators to control pests - Must take care that introduced agent does not
attack unintended hosts
19Alternatives to Pesticides
- Pheromones and Hormones
- Can use pheromones to lure pests to traps
- By applying insect hormones at wrong time in life
cycle, insects can be killed off - Reproductive Controls
- Sterilizing some of the members
- Sterile male technique
20Alternatives to Pesticides
- Genetic Controls
- Genetically Modified plants (GMOs)
- Bt toxin
- Potential problem may affect non-target species
(monarch butterfly) - Quarantine
- Restriction of the importation of exotic plant
and animal material that might harbor pests - Effective, but not foolproof
21Systems Approach- Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
- IPM
- Combination of pest control methods that keeps
pest population low without economic loss - Conventional pesticides are used sparingly when
other methods fail
22Systems Approach- Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
- Rice Production in Indonesia
23Alternatives to Pesticides
- Irradiating Food
- Harvested food is expose to ionizing radiation,
which kills many microorganisms - Predominantly used on meats
- Somewhat controversial due to potential for free
radicals
24Laws Controlling Pesticide Use
- Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act (1938)
- Pesticide Chemicals Amendment (1954)
- Delaney Cause (1958)
- Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act (1947) - Food Quality Protection Act (1996)
25Manufacture and Use of Banned Pesticides
- Some US companies still make banned or seriously
restricted pesticides - Product is exported
- May lead to the importation of food tainted with
banned pesticides - Global ban of persistent organic pollutants
- Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic
Pollutants (2004)
26Manufacture and Use of Banned Pesticides