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Pest Control Methods

  • Goal of Pesticides

    • Control pest organisms to reduce crop damage and increase crop yield

  • Ideal pesticide

    • Kill only target pest

    • Harm no other species

    • Breakdown into something harmless

    • Not cause genetic resistance

    • Cost-effective

  • Pesticides can be:

    • Broad-spectrum

    • Narrow spectrum

    • Vary in persistence

  • Types of pesticides

    • Insecticides: insect killers

    • Herbicides : weed killers

    • Fungicides : fungus killers

    • Nematocides : roundworm killers

    • Rodenticides : rat and mouse killers

  • 5 major pests in the United States

    • Grasshopper

      • Destroys crops in western U.S.

    • European red mite

      • Destroy deciduous fruit trees - apple, pear, plum

    • Boll weevil

      • Destroys cotton fields in the South

    • Pink boll worm

      • Destroys cotton farms in the South

    • Gypsy moth

      • Caterpillar destroys hard wood trees in the East

  • History of Pesticides

    • 500 B.C - sulfur

    • 1400s - arsenic, lead, mercury

    • 1600s - tobacco leaves

    • 1800s - pyrthrum and rotenone

    • 1939 - DDT

  • DDT

    • Dichlorosdiphenytrichloroethane

    • Pros

      • Controlled pests

      • Broad-spectrum

      • Inexpensive

      • Not water-soluble

      • Crop yield increased

      • Controlled malaria

    • Cons

      • Non-target creatures killed

        • Birds

        • Fish

    • Banned in 1972

  • Regulation

    • FIFRA

      • Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide

      • Amended in 1972

      • New and Old products

      • No more than 1 cancer per million people for certain pesticide over a lifetime

      • Requires EPA approval for the use of pesticides

    • 1996 Food Quality Protection Act

      • Human health

      • Amount that can remain on crop when eaten

  • Advantages of Pesticides

    • Saves lives

    • Prevents diseases

      • Malaria

      • Bubonic plague

      • Typhus

      • Sleeping sickness

    • Increase food supply

    • Lowers food waste

    • Works better and faster than alternatives

    • Minimal health risks

  • Disadvantages of Pesticides

    • Pesticide mobility

      • Pesticides are carried out by the wind and water runoff

        • Disrupts food webs that are far away

    • Genetic resistance

    • Causes human health problems

  • Other ways to control pests

    • Cultivation practices

    • Genetic Engineering (GMO)

    • Biological pest control

      • Natural predators

      • Parasites

      • Bacteria

    • Incest birth control

    • Spraying insects with hot water

      • Works well on cotton, alfalfa, and potatoes

    • IPM - integrated pest management

      • Limited use of pesticides and other practices

  • IPM - integrated pest management

    • Ecosystem based strategy that focuses on long term management of pests

    • Cultivation

      • Fool the pest through cultivation practices

        • Ex: intercropping - plant a crop that attracts the pest to protect the cash crop

    • Biological

      • Attract the pest’s predators

      • Add viruses that attach to specific insect’s larvae

      • Implant genetic resistance

      • Use pheromones to lure pests into traps

    • Physical

      • Put a net around the crop

      • Vacuum harmful bugs

    • Disadvantages

      • Requires expert knowledge

      • Methods applied in one area might not apply in another

      • Initial cost is higher

NE

Pest Control Methods

  • Goal of Pesticides

    • Control pest organisms to reduce crop damage and increase crop yield

  • Ideal pesticide

    • Kill only target pest

    • Harm no other species

    • Breakdown into something harmless

    • Not cause genetic resistance

    • Cost-effective

  • Pesticides can be:

    • Broad-spectrum

    • Narrow spectrum

    • Vary in persistence

  • Types of pesticides

    • Insecticides: insect killers

    • Herbicides : weed killers

    • Fungicides : fungus killers

    • Nematocides : roundworm killers

    • Rodenticides : rat and mouse killers

  • 5 major pests in the United States

    • Grasshopper

      • Destroys crops in western U.S.

    • European red mite

      • Destroy deciduous fruit trees - apple, pear, plum

    • Boll weevil

      • Destroys cotton fields in the South

    • Pink boll worm

      • Destroys cotton farms in the South

    • Gypsy moth

      • Caterpillar destroys hard wood trees in the East

  • History of Pesticides

    • 500 B.C - sulfur

    • 1400s - arsenic, lead, mercury

    • 1600s - tobacco leaves

    • 1800s - pyrthrum and rotenone

    • 1939 - DDT

  • DDT

    • Dichlorosdiphenytrichloroethane

    • Pros

      • Controlled pests

      • Broad-spectrum

      • Inexpensive

      • Not water-soluble

      • Crop yield increased

      • Controlled malaria

    • Cons

      • Non-target creatures killed

        • Birds

        • Fish

    • Banned in 1972

  • Regulation

    • FIFRA

      • Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide

      • Amended in 1972

      • New and Old products

      • No more than 1 cancer per million people for certain pesticide over a lifetime

      • Requires EPA approval for the use of pesticides

    • 1996 Food Quality Protection Act

      • Human health

      • Amount that can remain on crop when eaten

  • Advantages of Pesticides

    • Saves lives

    • Prevents diseases

      • Malaria

      • Bubonic plague

      • Typhus

      • Sleeping sickness

    • Increase food supply

    • Lowers food waste

    • Works better and faster than alternatives

    • Minimal health risks

  • Disadvantages of Pesticides

    • Pesticide mobility

      • Pesticides are carried out by the wind and water runoff

        • Disrupts food webs that are far away

    • Genetic resistance

    • Causes human health problems

  • Other ways to control pests

    • Cultivation practices

    • Genetic Engineering (GMO)

    • Biological pest control

      • Natural predators

      • Parasites

      • Bacteria

    • Incest birth control

    • Spraying insects with hot water

      • Works well on cotton, alfalfa, and potatoes

    • IPM - integrated pest management

      • Limited use of pesticides and other practices

  • IPM - integrated pest management

    • Ecosystem based strategy that focuses on long term management of pests

    • Cultivation

      • Fool the pest through cultivation practices

        • Ex: intercropping - plant a crop that attracts the pest to protect the cash crop

    • Biological

      • Attract the pest’s predators

      • Add viruses that attach to specific insect’s larvae

      • Implant genetic resistance

      • Use pheromones to lure pests into traps

    • Physical

      • Put a net around the crop

      • Vacuum harmful bugs

    • Disadvantages

      • Requires expert knowledge

      • Methods applied in one area might not apply in another

      • Initial cost is higher