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Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

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Page 1: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Pest ManagementChapter 23

APESAaron WilleySpring 2013

Page 2: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Essential Questions

Types and characteristics of pesticidesPros and cons of using pesticidesPesticide regulation in the USAlternatives to chemical pesticides

Page 3: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Your teacher’s obsession with spiders

Page 4: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Nature’s PESTicide

Page 5: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

What is a Pest anyway?• A pest is any species that…– Competes with humans for food– Invades lawns and gardens– Destroys wood in houses– Spreads disease– Are a nuisance

• Worldwide, only about 100 species of plants (weeds), animals (insects), fungi, and microbes cause about 90% of the damage

Page 6: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Polyculture Monoculture

• Natural “checks and balances”–Natural enemies (predators, parasites, and

disease organisms) control most pest species

• Monoculture crops –Now WE are forced to control pests nature

once took care of (for free)

Page 7: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Pesticides (aka Biocides)

• Chemicals used to control pests–Insecticides (insects)–Herbicides (plants)–Fungicides (fungi)–Rodenticides (rats and mice)

Page 8: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Coevolution

Page 9: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

First-Generation Pesticides

• Prior to 1940’s• Inorganic compounds–As, Hg, Pb

• Organic compounds–Nicotine sulfate (tobacco)–Pyrethrum (chrysanthemum)–Rotenone (tropical forest legumes)

Page 10: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Second-Generation Pesticides

• Synthetic organic compounds• Ranges from broad to narrow-

spectrum agents and persistence levels

Page 11: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

DDT• 1939• Paul Müller–Entomologist–Nobel prize

Page 12: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Life after DDT

• Since 1970, chemists have returned to natural chemicals (neem tree) to produce pesticides

• 2003 natural pesticide in Knapweed discovered

Page 13: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Pesticide use today

• Pesticide use on crops have leveled off since 1980

• Use on homes, lawns, parks, golf courses, etc have risen 50-fold since 1950–Most of these are 10

times as toxic

Page 14: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Table 23-1 Major Types of Pesticides

• Know:–Major classes–Broad or narrow-spectrum–Degree of persistence–Example of each–Does it undergo bioaccumulation–Difference between contact and systemic

herbicides(See p. 520)

Page 15: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Concept Check

• Briefly describe the history of the development of pesticides

Page 16: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Good….

1. They save human livesDDT and other chlorinated hydrocarbon and

organophosphate insecticides have prevented many deaths

– Malaria (mosquitoes)– Bubonic plague (rat fleas)– Typhus (body lice, fleas)

Page 17: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Good....

2. They increase food supplies55% of the world’s potential human food supply is lost to pests (37% of US)

Page 18: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Good….

3. They increase profits for farmers*4. They work faster and better than alternatives5. When used properly, their health risks are

very low compared to their benefits*

*Pesticide companies and American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) http://www.acsh.org/about/

Page 19: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Encouraging facts about Pesticides

• Newer pesticides are safer and more effective• Many new pesticides are used at lower rates• Genetically engineered crops could reduce

the need for pesticides

Page 20: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

What would an IDEAL pesticide look like?

1. Affect only target organism

2. Not cause genetic resistance

3. Break down/disappear in environment

4. More cost effective than doing nothing

Page 21: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Bad….1. Insects can rapidly become

genetically resistant to widely used pesticides

• Main problem with synthetic pesticides-It accelerates genetic resistance– Since 1945, several hundred species

have become resistant– Reemergence of diseases (malaria)– Pesticide treadmill

Page 22: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Bad….

2. Pesticides kill natural enemies of pests and create new pests

• Of the 300 most destructive insect pests in the US……

…..100 were once minor pests

Page 23: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Bad….

3. Pesticides do NOT stay put!

Page 24: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Bad….

4. Some harm wildlife (bees, birds, fish endangered species)

20% loss of honeybee colonies every year = 200 million cost to farmers

Page 25: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

The Bad….

5. Harm to humans• Agricultural workers– 3 million/yr (developing countries)– 300,000/yr US

• 4,000-20,000 cancer cases/yr• Childhood leukemia, Parkinson’s, immune

disorders, prostate cancer, breast cancer, behavioral disorders

Page 26: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Do they even make a difference?

• David Pimentel, insect ecologist– In the 1940’s, 31% of US crops lost to pests• So pesticide use increased 33-fold.

– Today about 37% of US crops lost to pests

Page 27: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Do they even make a difference?

• David Pimentel, insect ecologist– Estimated environmental, health, and social

costs of pesticides has been estimated up to $100-200 billion/yr

Page 28: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Do they even make a difference?

• David Pimentel, insect ecologist–Alternative practices could cut the pesticide

use in HALF on 40 major US crops WITHOUT reducing yields

Page 29: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

All My Pesticide Regulations

• Organophosphates• Persistent Organic

Pollutants (POPs) “Dirty Dozen”

• President Kennedy• 56 Active ingredients• Tolerance level• 43 out of 165• Pesticide Industry• Environmentalists

• Federal Insecticide, fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)

• Environmental Protection Agency

• DDT• Food Quality Protection Act

(FQPA)• Missouri children• National Academy of Science• India and Africa• Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring

Page 30: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

What should be the primary goal of pest control efforts?

• Reduce crop damage to an economically tolerable level– Economic threshold: the point at which the economic

losses outweigh the cost of applying pesticide• How do you determine when this threshold has

been met?– Insurance spraying– Pest-loss insurance– Cosmetic spraying

Page 31: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

1. Cultivation practices– Crop rotation,

switch planting seasons, polyculture, etc.

– Grass height, plant selection

Page 32: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

2. GMO– Pest and disease-

resistant– Controversial

Page 33: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

3. Biological pest control– Introducing

natural enemies

– What pros and cons can you think of?

Page 34: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

4. Insect birth control– Sterilization from

radiation and chemicals

– Screwworm fly

Page 35: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

5. Hormones– Pheromones– Interrupt life cycle

Page 36: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

Alternative Methods

6. Hot water– Cotton, alfalfa,

potato, citrus

7. Gamma radiation- Trace chemicals?- Long-term effects?

Page 37: Pest Management Chapter 23 APES Aaron Willey Spring 2013

When to go organic

Nectarines – 97.3% of nectarines sampled were found to contain pesticides.Celery – 94.5%Pears – 94.4%Peaches – 93.7%Apples – 91%Cherries – 91%Strawberries – 90%Imported Grapes – 86%Spinach – 83.4%Potatoes – 79.3%Bell Peppers – 68%Red Raspberries – 59%