Title: Silent Springs Rachel Carson
1Silent SpringsRachel Carson
- Michael Crawley
- Anup Shah
- April Quijano
2Chapter 9 Rivers of Death
- The spraying of DDT and other insecticides in
ecosystems has caused many disturbances and
problems in organisms communities.
3Rivers of DeathThe Salmon and the Spruce Budworm
- In 1953, salmon returned to the Miramichi River
located in New Brunswick, Canada, in order to
deposit eggs. - Coniferous forests of spruce and balsam trees
provide the kind of grounds needed for salmon to
survive. - Along with the hatched salmon in the spring of
1954, salmon one or two years old swam in the
Miramichi searching for various insects to feed
on. In the summer, it was a struggle for these
fish to find any source of food. - The watershed of the Northwest Miramichi was
included in a vast spraying program designed to
save the forests from the spruce budworm. - The budworm is a native insect that attacks many
kinds of evergreen. It seems to be abundant every
35 years in Eastern Canada and there was an
upsurge in budworm populations in the 1950s.
4Rivers of DeathThe Salmon and the Spruce Budworm
(cont.)
- Spraying with DDT had begun in order to combat
the budworm. First the spraying began in a small
way and then at an accelerated rate in 1953. - Millions of acres of forests were sprayed instead
of thousands as before, in an effort to save the
balsams which are the main producer for the paper
industry. - In 1954, planes were sent to spray the Northwest
Miramichi with one-half pound of DDT per acre.
The pilots did not avoid the streams or turn of
the spray nozzles while passing over the areas of
water. - Within two days after the spraying, dead and
dying fish, including many young salmon, were
found along the banks of the stream. Brook trout
also were found dead and birds were spotted dead
on roads and in the woods. - Before the spraying the stream contained caddis
fly larvae, stonefly nymphs, and blackfly larvae,
which all are the diet of young salmon but all of
these insects were killed due to the DDT
spraying. Therefore, the salmon had no source of
food after the spraying. - The salmon born in the spring were all killed due
to the insecticides. For every six young of the
1953 hatch that had foraged in the stream, only
one remained. The salmon of the 1952 hatch lost
a third of their population as well. - At this time the salmon had a Type 3 survivalship
curve. This meant that the salmon had very high
death rates for the young and had only a few
survive.(52.1) - The DDT acted as an abiotic factor that greatly
effected the flow of a food chain which resulted
in the death of the salmon. - The DDT spraying interrupted the repeated
reproduction of salmon during salmon season.
(52.2)
5Rivers of DeathThe Salmon and the Spruce Budworm
(cont.)
- The Fisheries Research Board of Canada conducted
a survey that showed more than a loss of fish it
revealed a serious change in the streams
themselves. - The repeated sprayings completely altered the
stream environment, and the aquatic insects that
are the food of salmon and trout had been killed. - A lot of time is needed to for most of the
insects to build up sufficient numbers to support
a normal salmon population - time measured in
years rather than months. - In order to supply natural food, Canadians tried
to transplant caddis fly larvae, but these larvae
would be destroyed if another spraying occurred. - The budworm populations did not decrease after
the spraying and this led to sprayings from 1955
to 1957 in New Brunswick with some places being
sprayed 3 times. By 1957, nearly 15 million acres
had been sprayed. - In 1954, a tropical storm hit Canada and salmon
were drawn in from the ocean. There was an
abundance of eggs in 1955 due to the storm in
1954 and the young salmon were able to live
because of the number of midgies and blackflies.
Unfortunately, the older salmon got killed off by
the spraying in 1954
6Rivers of DeathThe Salmon and the Spruce Budworm
(cont.)
- In all sprayed streams, young salmon of every
size are scarce. In the main Southwest
Miramichi, which was sprayed in 1956 and 1957,
the 1959 catch was the lowest in a decade. - In 1959, the whole Miramichi watershed produced
only 600,000 smolt (young salmon descending to
the sea). This was less than a third of the runs
of the three preceding years.
7Rivers of DeathSpraying in the United States
- The spraying of DDT also took place in Maine in
order to stop the spread of forest insects. The
spraying did not display a major hurt to the
salmon of Maine, but instead to other fish in
1958. - A study found that moribund suckers were showing
signs of DDT poisoning they swam erratically,
gasped at the surface, and exhibited tremors and
spasms. - In the first 5 days of spraying, 668 dead suckers
were collected and minnows and trout were also
killed. - In 1955, Yellowstone National Park was sprayed
which greatly affected the fish population. About
90 miles of rivers were affected and in a 300
yard length, 600 dead fish were counted,
including brown trout, whitefish, and suckers. - Even with these results, Forest Service officials
stated that it was safe to spray one pound of DDT
to the acre. - Montana Fish and Wildlife Service studied the
death and discovered that the insecticide was
very harmful to the fish and wildlife. - Control of the budworm had not even been achieved
after all of this spraying. - Despite the precautions taken to try to help
reduce risks of spraying, 100 percent of the
salmon in four streams was killed.
8Rivers of DeathAlternate Methods to Spraying
- There are cases on record where natural
parasitism has kept the budworm under control
more efficiently than spraying. - There are possibilities of using less toxic
sprays which include using microorganisms that
will cause disease among the budworms without
affecting the whole web of forest life. - It is important to realize that chemical spraying
of forest insects is neither the only way nor the
best way.
9Rivers of DeathPesticide Threat to Fishes
- One threat of spraying is to the fishes of
running streams in northern forests and to the
single problem of forest spraying. - Another is vast, sprawling, and diffuse, for it
concerns the many kinds of fishes bass, sunfish,
crappies, suckers, and others. - Fish are most sensitive to chlorinated
hydrocarbons which make up most of the modern
insecticides. - Reports of fish kills, some of disastrous
proportions, have now become so common that the
United States Public Health Service has set up an
office to collect such reports from the states.
10Rivers of DeathEconomic Affects
- 40 million Americans look to fishing as a major
source of recreation and they spend 3 billion
dollars annually. - Anything that deprives them of their sport will
reach out and affect a large number of economic
interests. - The commercial fisheries need fish in order to
produce food. Inland and coastal fisheries yield
an estimated 3 billion bounds a year. - The spraying of pesticides is now a threat to
both recreational and commercial fishing
11Rivers of DeathDestruction of Fish
- Agricultural crop sprayings are everywhere to be
found. - In California, the loss of 60,000 game fish
followed an attempt to control the rice leaf
miner with dieldrin. - In Louisiana, 30 or more instances of heavy fish
mortality occurred in one year alone because of
the use of endrin on sugarcane fields. - The use of heptachlor in the southern U.S. was
for fire ants. This chemical killed thousands of
fish in the south. This led to a halt in aerial
spraying. - Toxaphene was used to kill cotton insects but
ended up killing hundred of fish due to chemicals
washed into the rivers by rain.
12Rivers of DeathDestruction of Fish (cont.)
- In 1961 , Austin, Texas, was shocked to see dead
fish for nearly 200 miles. - Texas Game and Fish Commission discovered that
the chemicals killing all of the fish were coming
form a chemical plant. - The manager of the plant knew that they were
disposing chemicals into storm sewers and they
had been doing this for the past 10 years. - 27 different species of fish were observed, about
1000 pounds to a mile of riverbank. - Florida salt marshes were sprayed with dieldrin
and the results were catastrophic. The
Entomology Research Center of the State Bored of
Health stated that 1,175,000 fish died of 30
species. - Pesticides are also a threat to shrimp fisheries.
The insecticide tolerance for shrimp was found to
be very low by the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries
especially at a young age. - Clams and oysters are vulnerable to pesticides
too. -
13Chapter 10 Indiscriminately from the Skies
- People have had misgiving about aerial sprayings
because of two programs The gypsy moth program
in Northern parts of the United States and the
Fire Ant program in the Southern parts of the
United States.
14Indiscriminately from the Skies Gypsy Moth
(cont.)
- A few individuals from this species had escaped
in 1869 from a laboratory in Massachusetts. It
had spread in the North mainly due to wind. The
Adirondacks have served as a barrier to stop the
gypsy moths from spreading towards the rest of
the US. - The above statement is an example of dispersal
which is the moving of individuals away from
their area of origin. (50.2) - Before the aerial spraying programs started, 13
predators and parasites were imported from
outside the US. Along with that and local
spraying, achieved praises from the Department of
Agriculture in 1955. - Gypsy moths are ectoparasites which means they
feed off the external surface of the host. (53.1)
15Indiscriminately from the Skies Gypsy Moth
(cont.)
- In 1956, a program was started to eradicate the
gypsy moth, despite protests against citizens.
It covered a million acres in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, and New York. It included New York City
and Long Island, two areas where gypsy moths
would not normally live (their normal habitat is
forests, not fields, marshes, and cities). Spray
planes had been paid by the gallon than by acre,
and many properties were sprayed several times.
- Animals and fields had been contaminated. This
made it harder for farmers to sell their farm
produce since the FDA prohibits no residues in
milk. Leaf crops were also burned and spotted,
which hurt truck gardeners. - After 1957, the spraying programs was curtailed,
and the area sprayed had decreased to 100 acres
in 1959, 1960, and 1961. People could not sue
against the firm who handled the spraying since
it was out of state, had no local address, and
did not register with state officials.
16Indiscriminately from the SkiesFire Ant
- Named for its fiery sting, it was first found in
Mobile, Alabama shortly after WWI. By 1928, it
had spread to the suburbs of Mobile and started
to invade the rest of the Southern states. - Before 1957, it was not considered a threat, but
rather as a nuisance, because of the large nests
it tends to built. Also, it was proved to be
helpful since it preyed on harmful insects. - In 1957, the Department of Agriculture launched a
propaganda program to get supporters for their
spraying program against the fire ant. The
program mainly showed the fire ant as a dangerous
insect which spoils crops and kills living
organisms. - Because of the program, wildlife in the sprayed
area became devastated. For example opossums,
armadillos, and raccoon had disappeared in Hardin
County, Texas. Populations of the bob-white quail
and wild turkey were decimated. Woodcocks were
found to have up to 20 parts per million of
heptachlor 6 months after. A two moth calf was
tested by a scientist by Dr. Pointevint, and was
found to have 79 parts per million of heptachlor
in its fat. - The above bullet is an example of biological
magnification. Toxins such as insecticides
become more concentrated in the fat tissues of an
organism in a successive tropic levels of a food
web. (54.5)
17Indiscriminately from the SkiesFire Ant (cont.)
- After three years, the rate of application went
down to ¼ a pound. Also, to offset the
dissatisfaction with the program, the Agriculture
Department offered free chemicals to farmers in
exchange for them taking responsibility for their
damage. Alabama had stopped funding the program,
and farmers in Louisiana gradually showed
reluctance to sign up for the program.