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Pests and Pest Control

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Title: Pests and Pest Control


1
Pests and Pest Control
  • AP Environmental Science Chapter 16

2
  • The Bug That Is Trying To Eat New Orleans
  • Originally from East Asia, the Formosan termite
    infests over a dozen southern states, costing an
    estimated 1 billion a year in property damages,
    repairs, and control measures.
  • They are believed to have arrived in New Orleans
    as military ships returned from the far East
    after World War II. They were probably
    stowaways, living on the wood that made up crates
    and other packing material.
  • These insects are much more invasive than the
    native termites.

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  • In addition to wood products used in buildings,
    Formosan termites, unlike native termite, also
    attack trees. Thirty percent of the oldest live
    oaks in New Orleans have been damaged by these
    insects.
  • The Formosan termites have expanded their range
    from New Orleans to include 10 states in the
    South and West.
  • Rather than rely on chemicals as the sole
    defense, scientists are taking the offensive with
    an integrated pest management approach. One
    avenue of attack will begin in the laboratory as
    researchers look for ways to exploit weaknesses
    in the pest's biology, growth, chemical
    communication, and behavior.

6
  • There is work being done to synthesize chemical
    come-hither signals that the termites use to
    attract fellow termites to food sources and other
    locations. These signaling chemicals could be
    used to make toxic baits even more
    irresistible--and deadly.

7
  • Currently Formosan termites are being baited at
    bait stations throughout the city. Scientists
    monitoring the insects set out commercial bait
    products around buildings and in parks. The baits
    work by luring foraging termites to bite off food
    laced with an insect growth regulator like
    hexaflumuron, which prevents the pest from
    molting.
  • A type of mold that feeds on termites is being
    added to the bait. The spores are eaten along
    with the hexaflumuron and taken to the nest for a
    one two punch.

8
The Need for Pest Control
  • Insects are not the only pests that plague humans
    in their attempts to build structures, live a
    life free of disease, and grow crops.
  • There are pest plants, molds, slugs, rats, mice,
    birds, and plant pathogens that compete with
    humans for food, attack our animals and invade
    our homes.

9
  • Agricultural pests are organisms that feed on
    crops, ornamental plants or agricultural animals
  • Weeds are plants that compete with agricultural
    crops, forests and forage grasses for light and
    nutrients.
  • The importance of Pest Control
  • Insects, plant pathogens and weeds destroy about
    34 of potential agricultural production in the
    US costing 122 billion to consumers and
    producers.

10
  • Phythophtora infestans, the fungus that caused
    the blight in potatoes that caused so much death
    in Ireland in the 1800s, is considered to be
    global agricultures worst crop disease. It is
    by no means eradicated and attacked potato crops
    in Russia in the 1990s.
  • Striga hermonthica is a parasite weed that causes
    billions of dollars in losses in East Africa.
    When a farm is infested with Striga, the affected
    plants hardly grow more than one foot tall. The
    weed does not grow on its own but grows by
    attaching itself onto the host plants. Each
    Striga plant can produce up to 20,000-50,000
    seeds, which lie dormant in the soil until a
    cereal crop is planted again. This dormancy can
    last for over 15 years. As striga germinates,
    it's roots grow towards the host crop, penetrates
    that crops roots and starts to draw nutrients
    from there. This causes severe stunting of the
    host crop and yield loss.

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  • The desert locust is still alive and well in
    Africa. It has the potential to migrate
    thousands of miles and destroys food crops
    perpetuating the poverty in already poor African
    nations.

13
  • Historically, chemicals have been used to kill
    animals, insects and noxious weeds. In 1999 912
    million pounds of herbicides and pesticides
  • The practice of agriculture, using monoculture,
    and genetically identical crops have increased
    crop yields, but have also increased loss of
    crops to pests.
  • Crop loss in 1956 was 31. Today 37 of crops
    are lost. This discrepancy was caused by
    herbicide and pesticide use.

14
Ways To Control Pests
  • Chemical treatment the magic bullet to
    eradicate or greatly lessen the numbers of the
    pest organism. Unfortunately, the chemicals that
    kill pest insects also kill insects and other
    organisms that are beneficial to man.
  • Ecological control based on knowing the pests
    life cycle and ecological relationship. The
    ecological approach protects people and domestic
    plants and animals from pests rather than
    eradicate the pest organism. The pest can be
    controlled while the ecosystem and all its
    components remain stable and intact.

15
  • When these two philosophies are combined, the
    approach is called integrated pest management.
  • It brings about long term management of the pest
    problem while having a minimal impact on the
    environment.

16
The Chemical Approach
  • Classes of pesticides
  • Insecticides for insects
  • Rotenticides for mice and rats
  • Herbicides for weeds
  • Fungicides for fungi
  • All of these have an effect on organisms other
    than the target species.
  • Pesticides and their development and successes.
  • First generation pesticides included heavy metals
    that were toxic to certain organisms.

17
  • These chemicals were effective (example scale
    insects on fruit trees)
  • The problem with these is that they accumulated
    in the soil.
  • In 1900 90 of target insects were killed. By
    1930, the same chemical killed as few as 3 of
    the target insects.
  • Second generation pesticides developed as a
    result of organic chemistry.
  • In 1938, a Swiss chemist, Paul Müller developed
    a chemical, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
    (DDT). It was and still is an effective
    insecticide. It was considered the magic
    bullet. It seemed nontoxic to humans and other
    mammals. It was cheap. It was broad spectrum.
    It was also persistent and provided lasting
    protection.

18
  • During WWII, the military used DDTA to control
    body lice which spread typhus . Historically,
    typhus killed more soldiers in any other war,
    because of filthy living conditions, than of
    battle wounds.
  • DDT was used against the Aedes ageypti mosquito,
    which is the vector carrying the virus that
    causes dengue fever. It was effectively used to
    control Anopholes mosquitoes, and thus to control
    malaria.
  • There is no question that DDT has saved millions
    of lives.
  • Müller was awarded the Nobel prize for medicine
    in 1948 for his discovery of DDT.

19
  • After the war
  • DDT was used to control the spruce budworm,
  • It was sprayed on salt marshes to kill
    mosquitoes.
  • It was sprayed in the suburbs to control the
    beetle that spread Dutch elm disease
  • It was the bomb diggity in insect control in
    agriculture.
  • It was so effective that many crop yields
    increased dramatically.
  • Growers could ignore good agricultural management
    such as crop rotation and destroying previous
    years crop residues. They could grow crops in
    areas that, previously were too wet, too warm, or
    too moist, lending crop growth there impossible.

20
  • The success of DDT led chemists to develop more
    synthetic chemical pesticides./
  • Problems associated with Chemical Pesticide Use.
  • Development of resistance by pests.
  • This is the most common problem with chemical
    pesticides.
  • In 1946 it took 1.1 lbs of pesticide to provide
    protection to produce 60,000 bu of corn. By 1971
    it took 141 lbs to produce the same amount.
    Losses due to pests increased during the
    intervening years.
  • This is due to resistance buildup. Insects have
    an incredible potential to reproduce. They
    produce thousands of times the number of
    individuals to replace the original parents.

21
  • Repeated pesticide use results in the selection
    of genetic lines that are highly or totally
    resistant to the chemicals that were designed to
    kill them.
  • Natural selection is a powerful force to reckon
    with!
  • The last Roundup.
  • The herbicide glyphosate is used widely on
    genetically modified Roundup Ready corn,
    soybeans, and cotton. The crops contain a gene
    that makes them resistant to glyphosate.
  • Several weeds have now developed a resistance to
    glyphosate giving concern to the agriculture
    world so heavily dependent on Roundup Ready
    crops.

22
Number of species resistant to pesticides
1908-1998.
23
  • Resurgences And Secondary Outbreaks
  • Resurgence is the tendency for a pest that has
    been virtually eliminated, to recover and explode
    to higher and more severe levels.
  • Secondary pest outbreaks -Small populations of
    insects, previously of low or no concern start to
    explode creating new problems.

24
  • Recently in California, a study of pest outbreaks
    listed 25 major incidences causing more than 21
    million in damage. All but one of these pests
    involved resurgences or secondary-pest outbreaks.
  • To make matters worse, the secondary pest
    outbreak species became resistant to pesticides.
  • The chemical approach fails because it ignores
    basic ecological principles. It assumes that the
    ecosystem is static and that one species can be
    eliminated.

25
  • In the natural world, plant eating insects, while
    not totally eliminated, are often held in check
    by other organisms that prey or parasitize them.
  • Using chemical pesticides often have more impact
    on the natural enemies than on the target pest.
  • The treadmill this describes attempts to
    eradicate pests with synthetic organic chemicals,
    leading to more resistance and more secondary
    pest outbreaks.

26
  • Human Health Effects
  • Pesticides can be the agent for acute and chronic
    health problems
  • Numbers indicate over 90,000 persons were
    poisoned by pesticides in 2001 with 17 deaths.
  • WHO of the United Nations estimated between 3.5
    and 5 million cases of acute occupational
    pesticide poisoning each year in developing
    countries with at least 20,000 resulting in
    death.
  • This is because untrained people are using and
    applying the pesticide.
  • Children and families come in contact with the
    pesticides through aerial spraying, dumping of
    wastes and use of pesticide containers to store
    drinking water. Organophosphates and carbamates
    were the causative agents for most of the
    poisonings

27
  • It is inevitable that consumers are exposed to
    pesticides.
  • Pesticides are used not only on the crops during
    the growth phase of production, but also on the
    harvested food as it goes to market.
  • There is a potential of causing cancer including
    lymphoma and breast cancer.
  • Chronic effects include dermatitis, neurological
    disorders, birth defects, and infertility.
  • Depression of the immune system is a danger as
    well as disruption of the endocrine system.
  • This evidence comes from lab animal testing and
    epidemiological studies. Factory workers exposed
    to pesticides in India led to abnormally low
    white blood cell counts.

28
  • Atrazine, alachlor, (weed killers)DDT,
    endosulfan, diazinon and methoxychlor
    (insecticides) interfere with reproductive
    hormones, and are implicated in a rise in the
    indcidence of breast cancer among humans.
  • Abnormal sexual development in alligators and
    other animals in the wild have suggested that low
    levels of a number of chemicals mimic or disrupt
    the effects of estrogenic hormones.
  • Farm workers and herbicide sprayers have
    defective sperm counts.

29
  • Environmental Effects
  • In the 1950s and 1960s ornithologists observed
    drastic declines in fish eating birds.
    Extinction of the bald eagle seemed imminent.
  • It was observed that the eggs were breaking
    before they were hatching.
  • The eggs contained dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylen
    e (DDE) which is a product of the partial
    breakdown of DDT by the animals body
  • DDE interferes with calcium metabolism, causing
    birds to lay thin-shelled eggs.
  • The birds were acquiring high levels of DDT and
    DDE by bioaccumulation and biomagnification.

30
  • Because of accumulation, small amounts received
    over a long period of time may reach toxic
    levels. (bioaccumulation)
  • These chemicals concentrate themselves in fatty
    tissues of the body. Because they are synthetic,
    the body cannot fully metabolize them and has no
    way to excrete them.
  • Each organism accumulates contaminated food and
    accumulates a concentration of contaminant in its
    body that is many times higher than found in its
    food.
  • The next organism has a more contaminated food
    and accumulates the contaminant even more.
  • There is no warning or indication that this is
    occurring until concentrations of contaminant are
    high enough to cause problems.

31
  • Silent Spring
  • Written in 1962 by Rachel Carson, documenting the
    almost uncontrolled use of insecticides across
    the US.
  • Made a big impact on the public
  • Proponents of the agriculture and chemical
    industries decried the book as unreasonable and
    that halting the use of insecticides would halt
    human progress.
  • The book and its impact, along with concerns
    about the long term health risks due to
    pesticides led to banning DDT in the US and most
    other industrialized countries.

32
  • The result has been that the bird species that
    were adversely affected have recovered.
  • The debate centers on the continued use of DDT
    against malaria in developing countries.
  • Rachel Carson is credited for stimulating the
    start of the modern environmental movement and
    the creation of the EPA. Rachel Carson died of
    cancer 2 years after her book was published.
  • Nonpersistent Pesticides
  • Because of their nature, chlorinated hydrocarbons
    remain in the environment for many years.
    Microbes are unable to break them down. The
    halflife for DDT is 20 years.
  • Organophosphates and carbamates have been
    substituted for chlorinated hydrocarbons.
  • These compounds are inhibitors for the enzyme
    cholinesterase, necessary for proper functioning
    of the nervous system in all animals.

33
  • These chemicals break down into simple nontoxic
    products within a few weeks after their
    application.
  • They are not as environmentally sound as they
    might appear. Many are more toxic than DDT and
    are a very real hazard to agricultural workers.
    Organophosphates are responsible for 70 of all
    pesticide poisonings.
  • The Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 requires
    the EPA to develop new health-based standards
    that address the risk of childrens exposure to
    such pesticides. Chemicals that are banned
    include parathion on produce, chlorpyrifos on
    flea collars, tomatoes and on apples once bloom
    has ceased. Diazinon has been banned for may
    agricultural and all indoor residential uses.
    Outdoor uses are being phased out.

34
  • Monocrotophos is an organophosphate used in
    Argentina to control grasshoppers. 20,000 hawks
    died in one year. In response, the Argentine
    government banned the use of monocrotophos in
    1996. It was banned in the US in 1988.
  • Desirable insects are just as sensitive as pest
    insects to nonpersistent pesticides/
  • Bees are highly susceptible.
  • Nonpersistent chemicals are just as likely to
    cause resurgence and secondary-pest outbreaks as
    well as force insect populations to become
    resistant.

35
Alternate Pest Control Methods
  • Ecological control involves
  • Working with natural factors instead of synthetic
    chemicals
  • Biological controls
  • Understand the life cycle of the pest
  • Find out where in the life cycle the pest is
    vulnerable
  • Could be a parasite or a predator
  • Interfere with finding food or finding a mate
  • Four categories
  • Cultural control
  • Control by natural enemies
  • Genetic control
  • Natural chemical control

36
  • Cultural control
  • Nonchemical alteration of one or more
    environmental factors in such a way that the pest
    finds the environment unsuitable or is unable to
    gain access to its target.
  • Disposing of sewage
  • Avoiding unsafe drinking water
  • Personal hygiene
  • Window screens
  • Sanitation in handling and preparing food

37
  • Cultural control of Pests affecting Lawns,
    Gardens and Crops
  • Good cultural practices, not mowing grass too
    short
  • The right plant in the right place
  • Eliminate plants that are attractants (roses)
    and grow plants that are repellants (marigolds
    and chrysanthemums)
  • Provide habitat for natural enemies of pests.
  • Shelterbelts, nesting sites, fencerows,
  • Plow under or burn crop residue
  • Crop rotation
  • Border control

38
  • Control by Natural Enemies
  • Find predators for pest insects, parasitic wasps
  • Rabbits in Australia are controlled by a virus
  • Green muscle, a mixture of spores that attacks
    desert locusts.
  • Protect the natives
  • Import aliens as a last resort

39
  • Genetic Control
  • Grow resistant varieties resistant potatoes to
    prevent late blight
  • Grow with Chemical barriers
  • Some plants naturally produce chemicals that are
    toxic to insect pests.
  • A wheat variety was developed that has a chemical
    that is toxic to the Hessian fly.

40
  • Control with physical barriers
  • Hooked hairs on plant surfaces trap and hold
    immature leafhoppers until they die.
  • Enhance these aspects
  • Control with sterile males
  • Flood the population with sterile males
  • Combating the screwworm

They look like any other fly. But, the little bug
looks for an open wound, lays her eggs quickly,
then those eggs slowly screw their way into the
flesh looking for blood serum. Scientists
realized that the female only mated one time and
if they could produce enough sterile flies to
overcome the population then they might be able
to decrease the population of screw flies.
41
  • Tsetse fly -
  • the sterile male technique has also been used on
    Zanzibar, eliminating trypanosomiasis (sleeping
    sickness).
  • Efforts are being made to continue this effort on
    other parts of the African continent.
  • Biotechnology
  • genetic engineering makes it possible to
    introduce genes into crop plants from other
    species.
  • Transplant the gene for the protein that makes a
    virus protein coat. The plant becomes resistant
    to infection by the real virus. This has been
    done for more than 12 plant viruses

42
  • Bt
  • Plants are bioengineered to incorporate a protein
    normally produced by Bacillus thuringiensis. The
    protein kills the larvae of quite a few plant
    eating pests. It, however, is harmless to
    mammals, birds and most other insects. It has
    been used in corn, potatoes and corn.
  • Roundup Ready ?
  • these are plants engineered with a gene that
    makes them resistant to glyphosate.
  • Biotechnical crops are not well suited to
    developing countries.

43
  • The seed is expensive
  • a definite possibility of developing super weeds
  • Natural Chemical Control
  • hormones - a signaling chemical
  • pheromones - chemicals secreted by an individual
    to control behavior of another individual of the
    same species.
  • There are juvenile hormones that prevent
    pupation.
  • Mimic - a synthetic variation of ecdysone., the
    molting hormone. Mimic begins the molting
    process but doesnt complete it.

44
  • Pheromones - used by insects to attract mates.
    Pheromones can be used in traps. They can also
    be sprayed over fields to confuse males who dont
    find the females and fail to mate.
  • Socioeconomic issues in Pest Management
  • natural controls are aimed at keeping pest
    populations below damaging levels
  • what is the economic threshhold? (economic losses
    are greater than the cost o applying a pesticide)
  • people like their fruit to be unblemished so we
    are willing to accept pesticide residue on fruit
    so that we can buy pretty fruit. Cosmetic
    spraying

45
  • IPM the Four Tiered Approach
  • Set action thresholds - an assignment is made to
    a point where action must take place.
  • Monitor and identify pests - field scouts are
    trained in identifying and monitoring pest
    populations.
  • They help determine when the population exceeds
    the economic threshold
  • Prevention - polyculture instead of monoculture,
    destruction of crop residues. Maintenance of
    predator populations, trap crops are used.
  • Control - if the preceding steps indicate that a
    pest control is needed in spite of the preventive
    methods, then pesticides may b used.

46
  • Many farmers still want to continue to use
    pesticides because they worked for them in the
    past. To encourage farmers to try IPM there is
    Pest Loss insurance - this pay farmers in the
    event of loss due to pests. This has eliminated
    costly and dangerous insurance spraying.
  • Governments stabilize the costs of pesticides,
    making it easy for farmers to stay on the
    pesticide treadmill. An Indonesian experience has
    provided a viable IPM model for other rice
    growing countries. Instead of heavy pesticide
    spraying to control the brown plant hopper, a
    light spraying is used that preserves the natural
    enemies of the brown plant hopper. This hs
    eliminated the costly spraying of tons of
    pesticides. Fish are now thriving on rice
    paddies.

47
  • Organically Grown Food
  • Organically grown food have increased 20 per
    year for the last decade. It I now an 11
    billion enterprise in the US and 25 billion
    worldwide.
  • In 1990, Congress passed the Organic Foods
    Protection Act. This established the National
    Organic Standards Board, NOSB, under the USDA
    auspices.
  • No product can be genetically engineered
  • No irradiation
  • No foods that have been fertilized with sewage
    sludge.
  • No chemical pesticides, antibiotics, growth
    hormone, no chemical fertilizers.

48
  • Pesticides and Policy
  • Pesticides must be evaluated both for their
    intended uses and for their impacts on human
    health and the environment.
  • Those who use the pesticides must be
    appropriately trained and protected from the
    risks of close contact
  • because most of the agricultural applications
    involve food, the public must be protected from
    the risks of pesticide residues on food products.
  • FIFRA - The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
    Rodenticide Act. This law addresses the first two
    above concerns. FIFRA is administered by the
    EPA.
  • Places high priority on registering reduced
    risk pesticides. These are pesticides that
    promise to replace more toxic chemicals. Most
    are biopesticides
  • examples include Bt
  • these pesticides often clear the registration
    process within a year compared to 3 years for
    conventional pesticide

49
  • Pesticide workers must be trained under a program
    controlled by the EPA. The states must
    demonstrate to the EPA that on the basis of the
    federal regulations, they have adequate
    regulation and enforcement mechanisms.
  • FQPA of 1996 -
  • The Delaney Clause - No food additive shall be
    deemed to be safe if it is found to induce cancer
    when ingested by man or animal.
  • This clause was applied in prohibiting many
    pesticides from being used on food when those
    pesticides had been found to cause cancer in lab
    tests with animals

50
  • The law states that if a given pesticide presents
    any risk of cancer, no detectable residue may
    remain on the food.
  • As testing became more sensitive, extremely low
    traces could be measured.
  • After years of debate, congress passed the Food
    Quality Protection Act
  • reasonable certainty of no harm for substances
    applied to food.
  • Special consideration to exposure of young
    children to pesticide residues
  • pesticides can be prohibited if shown to carry a
    risk of more than one case of cancer per million
    people
  • all sources of exposure to a pesticide evaluated
  • older products (before1996) must be reassessed.
  • Special attempt to evaluate potential harm on
    hormone disrupters
  • same standards applied to raw and proceed foods

51
  • Care for children -
  • they consume more fruits and vegetables per unit
    of body weight.
  • More susceptible to carcinogens and neurotoxins
  • limits set on the amounts of a pesticide that
    remain in or on foods.

52
  • Pesticides in Developing Countries
  • 35,000 tons of pesticides imported each year.
  • 25 of these are chemicals banned in the US
  • FIFRA requires informed permission from the
    purchaser .
  • EPA notifies the government as to the identity of
    the importing country.
  • PIC
  • Two UN agencies. The FAO and the UNEP require a
    prior informed consent (PIC) where exporting
    countries inform all potential importing
    countries of actions they have taken to ban or
    restrict the use of pesticides or other toxic
    chemicals.

53
  • The importing country responds to the
    notification via the UN agencies, which then
    disseminate all the information they receive to
    the exporting countries.
  • The UN is also addressing the unsafe use of
    pesticides in developing countries. The code
    determined by the FAO (Food and Agriculture
    Organization of the United Nations) in Nov. of
    2002, makes clear the responsibilities of both
    private companies and countries receiving
    pesticide in promoting their safe use. All this
    is voluntary and not legally binding but it does
    help in holding private industry and importing
    countries to standards of safe use.
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