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Grade 9 Science

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... Weeds, mosquitoes, ... toxic to wide range of species E.g. DDT: Insecticide; ... PCBs Pesticide resistance When pesticides are used for long periods of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Grade 9 Science


1
Pests Pesticides
  • Grade 9 Science
  • Ms. Brothers

2
Pests
  • There are no pests in nature it is all
    subjective
  • Organisms that might compete or damage crop
    species (reduce yield)
  • Weeds, mosquitoes, mice

3
Monocultures
  • When farmers plant a monoculture, they create the
    ideal environment for pests
  • Colorado potato beetles

4
Pesticides
  • A substance (poison) to kill pests
  • Herbicides ? plants
  • Insecticides ? insects
  • Rodenticides ? rodents (mice)
  • Fungicides ? fungus
  • Molluscicides ? snails
  • Piscicides ? fish

5
Pesticides
  • 1. Long-lived lasts many years
  • E.g. synthetic pesticides
  • 2. Short-lived lasts a few days
  • E.g. Natural pesticides

6
Pesticides
  • 3. Broad-spectrum toxic to wide range of species
  • E.g. DDT Insecticide toxic to MOST insect
    species
  • 4. Narrow-spectrum toxic to a limited of
    species
  • E.g. Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) Insecticide
    toxic to only caterpillars, beetle larvae, fly
    larvae

7
How do they work?
  • Physical harm
  • E.g. diatomaceous earth abrasive powder
    scratches outer coating of small organisms
  • Chemical harm
  • E.g. interfere with photosynthesis damage vital
    organs, etc.

8
How do they work?
  • Direct
  • Delivered by contact pest must touch pesticide
  • Indirect
  • e.g. herbicide that is sprayed on the grass will
    only take effect once it is taken up by the roots
    of the weed.

9
Issues with Pesticides
  • Non-target species
  • Broad-spectrum pesticides will kill species that
    were not intended to be killed
  • Might even kill potentially beneficial organisms,
    i.e. Predatory insects that normally feed on
    pests
  • Thereby causing farmers to be more dependent on
    pesticides

10
Non-target species
  • Other examples
  • Honeybees killed ? unable to pollinate fruit
    crops
  • DDT to kill mosquitoes (reduced spread of
    malaria), but also killed wasps. The wasps ate
    thatch-eating caterpillars, and since their
    predator was killed, they ate the villagers
    thatch roofs.

11
Issues with Pesticides
  • Bioamplification
  • The concentration of pesticide that accumulates
    in the body of an organism
  • Pesticides that bioaccumulate do so because they
    cannot easily be excreted from the body.
  • If a pesticide bioamplifies in a food chain, it
    may reach toxic concentrations
  • E.g. DDT, mercury, PCBs

12
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13
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14
Issues with Pesticides
  • Pesticide resistance
  • When pesticides are used for long periods of
    time, it might lose its ability to control the
    pest.
  • Individuals will survive an application of
    pesticide, and will reproduce and pass on their
    resistance to their offspring
  • After many generations, the population can become
    highly resistant to a particular pesticide

15
Issues with Pesticides
  • Pesticide resistance continued...
  • Global scale pesticide resistance is a serious
    concern

16
Organic farming
  • Farming without the use of synthetic pesticides
    or fertilizers
  • Accept crop losses ? Higher prices for products
  • Control
  • Biological
  • Altered timing
  • Crop rotation mixed planting
  • Baiting pest

17
Integrated Pest Management
  • We can reduce our dependence on pesticides by
    using organic farming in combination with other
    types of management methods
  • The goal
  • To maximize efficiency
  • Keep costs low
  • Reduce harm to the environment
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