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Pesticides and the Environment

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Title: Pesticides and the Environment


1
Pesticides and the Environment
  • ASM 336

2
Pesticides
  • Goal to stop or limit pest occurrence
  • Types
  • Insecticides kill insects
  • Herbicides kill weeds
  • Fungicides suppress or kill fungi

3
Benefits
  • Allow agricultural producers to improve the
    quality, quantity, and diversity of our food
    supply.
  • Used in timber, turf, horticulture, aquatic, and
    structural pest control industries.
  • Homeowners and home gardeners often use
    pesticides in their homes, yards, and on pets.

4
What Happens after Application?
  • When pesticides are applied the goal is that they
    will remain in the target area long enough to
    control a specific pest and then degrade into
    harmless compounds without contaminating the
    environment.
  • Once applied, many pesticides are mobile in the
    environment (air, soil, water).
  • This movement can be beneficial (moving pesticide
    to target area, such as roots) but can also
    reduce the effect on the target pest and injure
    nontarget plants and animals.

5
Pathways of pesticide movement
  • Runoff
  • Chemical degradation
  • Volatilize (gas vapor)
  • Leaching and breakdown in soil
  • Leaching and degradation by microbes
  • Photo degradation (sun)

6
Factors influencing a pesticides fate
  • Properties of the pesticide
  • Conditions where when applied
  • Application method

7
Properties of the pesticide
  • Vapor Pressure (volatility) pesticides with a
    high vp are more likely to change to a gas and
    escape into the atmosphere.
  • Sorption attraction to soil surfaces,
    pesticides with higher sorption values have
    reduced leaching

8
Properties of the pesticide
  • Water Solubility/dissolvability - more soluble
    pesticides have lower sorption and are more
    mobile in the environment as they are leached or
    moved with runoff.
  • Persistence the amount of time a pesticide
    remains in the environment, measured by
    half-life. Pesticides with longer half-lives pose
    a greater threat to the environment.

9
Conditions where when applied
  • To maximize pesticide effectiveness and minimize
    negative environmental impacts, the pesticide
    must be compatible with the physical, chemical,
    and biological conditions of the application
    site.
  • For pesticides use in crop or plant pest control
    consider the following conditions
  • Soil physical and chemical properties (texture,
    amount of organic matter, pH).

10
Conditions where when applied
  • Geology depth to water table (larger distances
    give more soil to act as filter)
  • Surrounding water sources nearby water is more
    susceptible to contamination when pesticides are
    applied to highly erodible soils, over-irrigated,
    or rain-soaked soils. Managing crop residues and
    maintaining grass waterways and filter strips
    help to protect surface waters from sediment and
    pesticide pollution.

11
Conditions where when applied
  • Environmental conditions heavy or sustained
    rainfall or irrigation shortly after pesticide
    application can increase runoff, leaching, and
    volatilization.
  • Soil temperatures (extremely high or low) can
    interfere with pesticide performance. Pesticides
    generally become more volatile in high
    temperatures and windy weather.
  • Pesticides can be incorporated (disked in) or
    applied directly into the soil to decrease the
    potential for drift and volatilization.

12
Application method
  • The challenge for pesticide applicators is to
    maximize the benefits of pesticides through sound
    management while reducing environmental risks.
    This includes
  • Keeping current of the latest information.
  • Taking all necessary preventive measures,
    including transportation, secure storage, proper
    disposal of containers and rinsate, and spill
    prevention. Furthermore, avoid sensitive areas
    such as sinkholes, depressions, wells, surface
    water, public institutions and private buildings.

13
Product labels
  • The pesticide label is a binding, legal document.
    Compliance is required by state and federal
    regulations.
  • Label directions must be carefully followed
    from purchase to container disposal.
  • High risk pesticides may only be purchased and
    applied by certified persons.

14
Pesticide Use
  • Careful selection for a specific pest
    understand the pest, site, product, and risks.
  • Careful and responsible use.
  • shows a consideration for the environment.
  • .responsible stewardship
  • Acknowledgement WQ-19
  • By B. Joern, B. Lohman, and F. Whitford
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