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Pesticides and Pest Control
G. Tyler Miller’s
Living in the Environment
13th Edition
Chapter 20
wolf spider
crab spider
Key Concepts
Types and characteristics of pesticides
Pros and cons of using pesticides
Pesticide regulation in the US
Alternatives to chemical pesticides
What is a Pest?
Compete with humans for food
Invade lawns and gardens
Destroy wood in houses
Spread disease
Are a nuisance
May be controlled by natural enemies
Natural Ecosystem (Polyculture)
• Natural enemies of pests control 50 – 90%
of pest species (Earth’s ecological services)
• Natural enemies of pests prevent any one
pest species from taking control for very
long
Pesticides: Types
Chemicals that kill
undesirable organisms
Insecticides
Herbicides
Fungicides
Rodenticides
First Generation Pesticides
Primarily natural substances
Sulfur, lead, arsenic, mercury
Plant extracts:
nicotine, pyrethrum,
rotenone (from tobacco,
chrysanthemums, and tropical forest
legume roots, respectively.)
Plant extracts are degradable
Second Generation Pesticides
Primarily synthetic organic compounds
630 biologically-active compounds
Broad-spectrum agents
Narrow-spectrum agents
Target species
Nontarget species
Major Types of Insecticides
• Chlorinated Hydrocarbons
– DDT
– Highly Persistent (2-15 years)
• Organophosphates
– Malathion
– Moderately Persistent (1-2 weeks)
• Carbamates
– Sevin
– Low Persistence (days-weeks)
• Botanicals
– Rotenone, pyrethrum
– Low Persistence (days-weeks)
The Case for Pesticides
Save human lives
Malaria (mosquito)
Bubonic plague (rat fleas)
Typhus (body lice and fleas)
Sleeping sickness (tsetse fly)
Increase supplies and lower cost of food
55% of world’s potential food supply
is lost to pests
Without pesticides it would be worse
The Case for Pesticides
Work better and faster than alternatives
Health risks may be insignificant
compared to benefits
Newer pesticides are becoming safer
New pesticides are used at lower rates
MAJOR PESTS
Grasshopper
Gypsy moth
caterpillar
MAJOR PESTS
European red mite
MAJOR PESTS
Pink bollworm
ranges overlap
Boll weevil
BOLL WEEVIL
Boll Weevil
• Lay thousands of eggs every 21 days
• 6 generations per growing season
• 25% of pesticide use in US to control the
cotton boll weevil
• Approximately 0.24 pounds of pesticides to
make one cotton T-shirt
Characteristics of an Ideal Pesticide
Kill only target pests
Harm no other species
Break down quickly
Not cause genetic resistance
Be more cost-effective than doing nothing
The Case Against Pesticides
Genetic resistance (directional natural selection)
Can kill nontarget and natural control species
Can cause an increase in other pest species
The pesticide treadmill
Pesticides do not stay put
Can harm wildlife (pollinators and insect eaters)
Potential human health threats
Rise of Genetic Resistance to Pesticides
600
Number of species
500
Gypsy moth
caterpillar
Boll weevil
Insects and mites
400
300
Plant
diseases
200
Weeds
100
0
1950
1960
1970
1980
Year
1990
2000
2010
Pesticide Regulation in the United
States
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) (1947, 1972)
EPA Evaluation of chemicals for toxicity
Tolerance levels: specify the amount of
pesticide residue that can legally remain
on a crop when the consumer eats it
Good News
• Between 1972 and 2001, the EPA banned or
severely restricted the use of 56 active
pesticide ingredients
– Most chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides
– Several carbamates and organophosphates
– HOWEVER: they may still be
manufactured in US and exported to
other countries…..Circle of Poison
Bad News
• Less than 10% of the 600 active ingredients
used in pesticides have been evaluated fully.
– 165 are suspected human carcinogens
– Missouri study showed a connection between
childhood brain cancer and pesticide use in
home
– Multiple studies have shown connections
between pesticide use and various types of
cancers
Good News
• 1996 Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA)
– Requires new standards for pesticide tolerance
levels
– Requires manufacturers to demonstrate safety
for infants and children
– Allows EPA to apply an additional 10-fold
safety factor
– Requires EPA to consider exposure to more
than one pesticide when setting tolerance levels
Other Ways to Control Pests
Economic threshold: reduce crop damage
to an economically tolerable level
Adjusting cultivation practices
Use genetically-resistant plants
Biological pest control
Biopesticides
Insect birth control
Hormones and pheromones
Ionizing radiation (gamma)
Figure 20-8
Page 521
Integrated Pest Management
(IPM)
Ecological system approach
Reduce pest populations to
economic threshold
Field monitoring of pest populations
Use of biological agents
Chemical pesticides are last resort
Effects of IPM