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PROTECTING FOOD RESOURCES: PESTICIDES AND PEST CONTROL

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rodenticides - kill rats and mice ... Zap foods after harvest with radiation. effective against insects, parasitic worms and bacteria; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PROTECTING FOOD RESOURCES: PESTICIDES AND PEST CONTROL


1
CHAPTER 16
  • PROTECTING FOOD RESOURCES PESTICIDES AND PEST
    CONTROL

2
What good is a spider?
  • Chinese farmers are fighting insect pests with
    their naturally evolved natural enemies -the
    spiders
  • How are they encouraging the spiders?
  • Only a few species are actually dangerous to
    people
  • If bugs inherit the earth, we need to have their
    predators - the spiders -on our side!

3
Pesticides Types and uses
  • What are pests?
  • They compete with us for food
  • they invade lawns and gardens
  • they destroy wood in houses
  • they spread disease
  • they are a nuisance
  • By simplifying ecosystems we have eliminated many
    natural predators

4
Pesticides Types and uses - 2
  • What are pesticides?
  • Insecticides - kill insects
  • Herbicides - kill weeds
  • Fungicides - kill fungi
  • Nematocides - kill roundworms
  • rodenticides - kill rats and mice
  • Plants and herbivores have co-evolved chemical
    defenses against each other for years

5
First generation of pesticides and repellents
  • First sulfur, then in 1400s toxic compounds of
    arsenic, lead and mercury were put on crops - but
    caused human poisonings
  • Then compounds extracted from plants - nicotine
    sulfate, pyrethrum, rotenone
  • ant repellents boric acid, vinegar, cayenne
    pepper, and mint leaves
  • mosquito repellents - basil, vinegar, lime juice,
    mungwort oil - not bug zappers

6
First generation of pesticides and repellents - 2
  • Repel cockroaches - boric acid and banana spiders
    and trapping roaches
  • Repel flies - grow basil tansy flypaper
  • Repel fleas - flea soaps, feed brewers yeast and
    Vitamin B, flea powders and dips.
  • Higher lawns, not closely cut, provide spider
    habitats

7
Second general of Pesticides
  • 1939 - DDT discovered followed by other
    synthetic organic chemicals
  • Use by homeowners has grown has led to problems
    such as poisoning
  • These may be broad spectrum agents or more
    selective narrow spectrum agents
  • They vary in persistence

8
The case for pesticides
  • They have saved lives
  • They increase food supplies and lower costs
  • They increase profits for farmers
  • They work faster better than alternatives
  • Benefits exceed health risks - when used properly
  • Safer pesticides are being developed and new ones
    are used at low rate

9
The case against pesticides
  • Development of genetic resistance
  • Broad spectrum insecticides kill natural
    predators and parasites of pests
  • Without predators, new pests, previously in
    check, may become prevalent

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11
Pesticide treadmill
  • Genetic resistance --gt using more pesticide, more
    frequently, and switching to new pesticide
  • Alternative pest control practices are needed
  • Decrease in pesticide use would cut food costs
    and increase farmers income
  • Successes Sweden Campbells soup in Mexico

12
Where do pesticides go?How do they harm wildlife?
  • With aerial and ground spraying only 2-5 reaches
    target weeds
  • Better to use recirculating sprayers, cover spray
    booms to reduce drift, or use rope-wick
    applicators genetically altered crops

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14
How do insecticides harm wildlife?
  • Biological magnification --gtweak egg shells
  • Illegal use of banned pesticides
  • Honeybees and fish are threatened

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16
Pesticides threaten human health
  • Underestimate of health effects among farm
    workers due to poor records, few doctors
    reporting, and faulty diagnoses
  • Problems due to inadequate education, poor
    warnings, lax/nonexistent regulations and lack of
    protective equipment
  • DDT replaced by organophosphate pesticides - less
    persistent but more toxic

17
Pesticides threaten human health-2
  • Degree of illegal pesticide use is not known
  • Pesticide residues in food is carcinogenic
  • Increasing concern about
  • genetic mutations
  • birth defects
  • nervous system disorders (behavior disorders)
  • immune and endocrine system effects

18
Pesticide regulation in U.S.
  • Is the public protected by FIFRA and EPA?
  • Evaluate biologically active ingredients
  • Less than 10 evaluated fully
  • Set tolerance level - safe level for crop use
  • Banned most chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides,
    several carbamates and organophosphates and
    systemic herbicides
  • Premature deaths due to exposure underestimated

19
Other ways to control pests
  • Controlling pests with cultivation practices
  • crop rotation and poly vs. monocultures
  • planting barriers e.g. hedges to hinder insects
  • plant where pests dont exist or at a time when
    they are not prevalent
  • plant trap crops and remove infected plants
  • use plastic or vacuum off insects
  • Traditional cultivation made use of many of these
    practices abandoned with modern methods

20
Genetically resistant plants losses
  • Conventional methods of crossbreeding to get
    stronger, more disease (and pest) resistant
    plants is expensive and time-consuming.
  • Genetic engineering is speeding up the process.
  • Why would biotech companies be focusing on
    developing strains resistant to herbicides rather
    than to reduce need for pesticides?

21
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22
Natural enemy used for pest control
  • Biological pest control uses predators, parasites
    and pathogens
  • e.g. parasitic wasp use in Nigeria
  • cost effective - spend 1 - save 25 in damage
  • Advantages
  • focus on selected target species nontoxic on
    others
  • once established, may be self-perpetuating
  • minimal development of genetic resistance

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24
Natural enemy used for pest control-2
  • Limitations
  • years of research required to understand
    ecological interactions - to choose best agent
  • biological agents difficult to mass produce
  • may be difficult to apply and act slowly
  • biological agents must be protected from
    pesticides used nearby
  • may cause unpredicted harmful effects

25
Use of biopesticides
  • Botanicals (chemicals from plants)
  • Microbes like Bacillus thuringensis toxin
  • used frequently by organic farmers
  • but genetic resistance is occurring

26
Insect birth control methods
  • Process involves
  • Raise male of insect pests in laboratory
  • Sterilize them with radiation or chemicals
  • Release for mating with fertile females
  • Problems with approach
  • high costs
  • mating times and behaviors difficult to learn
  • need large of sterile males
  • works on limited of species

27
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28
Phermone control methods
  • Chemical sex attractant secreted by females ready
    to mate useful because chemicals
  • attract only one species
  • work in trace amounts
  • cause little genetic resistance
  • not harmful to nontarget species
  • But it is costly and time-consuming to identify,
    isolate and produce sex attractants
  • Hormones can interrupt life cycles

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32
Zapping insects
  • Zap with hot water - cost equals chemicals
  • Zap foods after harvest with radiation
  • effective against insects, parasitic worms and
    bacteria
  • food does not become radioactive
  • potential benefits exceed risk
  • more study needed
  • loss of vitamins minerals
  • danger to irradiation workers
  • botulism

33
Integrated Pest Management -IPM
  • Each crop and its pests are evaluated as parts of
    an ecological system
  • Aim is reduction of crop damage - not elimination
    of pest population
  • First use methods on p. 421 then try botanicals
    if necessary

34
Integrated Pest Management -IPM
  • Indonesia banned many pesticides, ended pesticide
    subsides, started IPM education program
  • Dramatic results
  • 65 decrease in pesticide use
  • 15 increase in rice production
  • 250,000 farmers trained in IPM
  • saved 120 million/year pesticide subsidies -
    1.2 billion total saved by government
  • similar results in China, U.S, Australia, Brazil

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36
Integrated Pest Management -IPM
  • Limitations
  • IPM requires expert knowledge pest situation
  • Slower acting than conventional pesticides
  • Methods may vary from situation to situation
  • Hindered by current government subsidies of
    chemical pesticides
  • Few county farm agents trained in IPM
  • 5 suggestions made to promote IPM in U.S.
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