ecological backlash the three rs - adam oliver...

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1 BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 1 Pest Management and Sustainability BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 2 Ontario Bans Pesticides ! Announced a ban on all ‘cosmetic use’ of pesticides in the province (Apr. 22/09) ! Applies to Class 9 Pesticides 2,4-D, glyphosate (Roundup), permethrin, pyrèthres (Raid) ! Exceptions: gold courses, sports fields, public health applications (ex. W. Nile Virus) ! See: http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/environment/en/index.htm BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 3 Ecological Backlash ! Counter responses of pest populations or other biotic factors in the environment that diminish impact of pest management tactics Usually delayed, therefore detection of effects may come too late BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 4 The Three Rs ! Major sources of backlash phenomenon ! Population ecology based phenomena ! 1- Resistance ! 2- Resurgence ! 3- Replacement BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 5 Resistance ! Most important of the three Rs ! Often associated with pesticide use but has been shown to occur with ALL pest management practices used to date ! Evolution by natural selection (preadaptive) BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 6 Resistance ! Rate of resistance development may depend on genetics of resistance factor Monogenic resistance: single gene expression, therefore possibly quick development e.g. House fly and DDT Polygenic resistance: several genes required, therefore may be slower to develop

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Page 1: Ecological Backlash The Three Rs - Adam Oliver Brownadamoliverbrown.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/9-IPM_6slides.pdf · Ecological Backlash ! ... 5 Resistance ! Most important of

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 1

Pest Management and Sustainability

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 2

Ontario Bans Pesticides !  Announced a ban on all ‘cosmetic use’

of pesticides in the province (Apr. 22/09)

!  Applies to Class 9 Pesticides –  2,4-D, glyphosate (Roundup), permethrin,

pyrèthres (Raid) !  Exceptions: gold courses, sports fields,

public health applications (ex. W. Nile Virus)

!  See: http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/environment/en/index.htm

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 3

Ecological Backlash

!  Counter responses of pest populations or other biotic factors in the environment that diminish impact of pest management tactics – Usually delayed, therefore

detection of effects may come too late

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 4

The Three Rs !  Major sources of backlash phenomenon !  Population ecology based phenomena !  1- Resistance !  2- Resurgence !  3- Replacement

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 5

Resistance !  Most important of the

three Rs !  Often associated with

pesticide use but has been shown to occur with ALL pest management practices used to date

!  Evolution by natural selection (preadaptive)

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 6

Resistance

!  Rate of resistance development may depend on genetics of resistance factor – Monogenic resistance: single gene

expression, therefore possibly quick development

•  e.g. House fly and DDT

– Polygenic resistance: several genes required, therefore may be slower to develop

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 7

Resistance Development

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 8

Mechanisms of Resistance

! Biochemical ! Physiological ! Behavioural ! Not mutually exclusive

from one another

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 9

Biochemical Resistance !  Insecticide usually attacked by an enzyme

that detoxify it before reaching site of action

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 10

Physiological Resistance !  Reduced toxicity due to changes in basic

physiology !  Often involve alterations in target site

–  e.g. knock-down resistance in House Flies to DDT involved reduction in number of target-site receptors making nerve sheaths less sensitive to toxicant

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 11

Behavioural Resistance !  Changes in behaviour that

allow pests to avoid pesticides

!  Limited to animal pests –  e.g. Malaria carrying

mosquitoes in Africa are composed of 2 strains - endophilic and exophilic

– Spraying inside homes selected for exophilic strain

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 12

The Pesticide Treadmill

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 13

Management of Resistance !  Moderation

– Low doses, infrequent application, low persistence, apply to adults after reproduction

– Goal is to reduce selection pressure and conserve susceptible genes in population

!  Multiple Attack – Use pesticide mixtures, apply in mosaic pattern,

rotate pesticides – Reduce selection pressure by imposing several

forces at once

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 14

Resurgence

!  Pest population is suppressed but rebounds in numbers that were greater than before pesticide application

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 15

Replacement

!  One pest population is suppressed and continues to be, while a second pest population previously of minor status

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 16

Causes of Resurgence and Replacement

!  Reduction of natural enemies by pesticide !  Direct favourable influences of pesticides

on physiology and behaviour of pests –  e.g. homoligosis: pest organism experiences

increased sensitivity and response to environmental factors

!  Removal of competitive species

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 17

Loss of Natural Enemies

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 18

Release of Natural Enemies

!  Insect (usually) are reared in lab

!  Release may or may not be after a pesticide application

!  Many available commercially !  Modern techniques involve

using pesticide resistant natural enemies

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 19

Methods of Insect Control

!  Cultural – Crop rotations, tillage, resistance

!  Mechanical – Traps, screens, light and sound

!  Chemical – Kill, repel, attract, disrupt physiology

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 20

Methods of Insect Control

!  Legal –  Inspections, quarantines, laws

!  Biological – Parasites, predators, diseases, temperature,

moisture, sex manipulation !  Integrated Control

– Combination of many methods

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 21

Pest Management and Sustainability

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 22

From Pest to Control to IPM

!  Historically, Pest Control has been ideal !  2 factors promoted shift towards

Integrated Control - selective use of pesticides in order to conserve natural enemies – Non-target effects observed in 50s-60s – Greater understanding of ecological systems

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 23

!  Integrated control led to notion of Pest Management - moderate pest populations using a variety of methods

!  Today, the consensus is towards Integrated Pest Management - avoiding pesticides as much as is possible – Greater reliance on natural processes – Requires greater understanding of ecological

interactions

From Pest to Control to IPM

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 24

Selective Spraying

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 25

IPM Techniques

!  Insect Growth Regulators !  Reducing Crop Susceptibility !  Biological Control !  Sex Manipulation !  Genetic Manipulation !  Biopesticides !  Ecological Habitat

Management

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 26

Biological Control

!  Use of natural enemies to moderate pest population

!  Not perfectly dependable or smoothly operating

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 27

!  Parasites – Organism that lives

on or in a host, feeding on it

– Host is weakened or killed

– Mostly nematodes

Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 28

!  Parasitoids –  Insects that parasitize in their

immature stages only

Biological Control

Exoparasitoid Endoparasitoid

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 29

!  Parasitoids - Good for 4 reasons – Good survival rates – Only one host is required for development – Populations can be sustained at low host

levels – Most parasitoids have a narrow host range,

therefore good numerical response

Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 30

!  Predators – May be mono-, oligo- or polyphagous – Each has advantages and disadvantages

•  e.g. polyphagous predator may switch to alternate prey when pest numbers are low. However, polyphagous predators may make poor pest controllers due to lack of preference for prey species.

Biological Control

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 31

!  Predators Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 32

!  Predators - Augmentation –  Any practice that increases the numbers of natural

enemies –  Usually temporary effects (one season)

!  Inundative releases: –  releases of massive numbers of predators to have a

suppressive effect on pest population !  Inoculative releases:

–  Released predators are expected to colonize the area naturally

–  Pest population suppression is effected by progeny of released predators

Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 33

!  Toxins from several species of Bacillus have been used – B. popilliae, B. lentimorbus – Highly fastidious (require host

to reproduce) – B. thuringiensis less fastidious,

therefore easier to propagate and use commercially

Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 34

!  Viruses –  1200 insect viruses used to date,

mostly on Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera

–  Nuclear polyhedrosis viruses (NPV) –  Granulosis viruses (GV) –  Cytoplasmic polyhedrosis viruses

(CPV) !  Insects catch disease and wilt after

dying –  Dead larvae rupture and release

polyhedra for further infection

Biological Control

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 35

Sex Manipulation !  Pheromone traps

– Chemically synthesized and put in sticky traps

– Affects only half of population (usually males) – Effect is on mating success

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 36

Sex Manipulation !  Mating disruption

– A confusion, or decoy method – Chemically synthesized pheromones

permeate the air –  Insects cannot locate mates and mating is

disrupted

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 37

Mating Disruption

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 38

Genetic Manipulation

!  Altering genetic make-up of pest population in order to: – Produce sterility of

progeny – Reduce fecundity – Reduce survival in

otherwise favourable conditions

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 39

Genetic Manipulation

!  Sterile Insect Technique –  Insects reared in laboratory are rendered

sterile and released – Effect is on mating disruption

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 40

Genetic Manipulation

!  Sterile Insect Technique - Methods –  Ionizing radiation (X and

Gamma rays): causes point mutation before gamete formation (usually pupal stage)

– Chemosterilization: chemicals can prevent gamete formation if applied at onset of meiosis

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 41

Biopesticides

!  Taking advantage of evolutionary history between plants and pests – Allelochemicals and plant secondary

compounds – Not new idea: nicotine, pyrethroids etc. – Now looking for new insecticidal compounds

in essential oils and other plant extracts

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 42

Biopesticides

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 43

Organic Production !  International Federation of Organic Growers

(www.ifoam.org) !  Method of production that aims to maintain the

integrity of the soil, ecosystems and people. !  Based on ecological processes, biodiversity and is

adapted to local conditions. !  In Canada, is governed by Canadian Organic

Growers (www.cog.org) –  Regulated by Canadian General Standards Board (CAN/

CGSB-32.310) –  Permitted substances also listed by CGSB (CAN/

CGSB-32.311)

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 44

Organic Production !  CAN/CGSB-32.310: Permitted substances

–  All products of genetic engineering –  Synthetic pesticides –  Fertilizers containing prohibited substances –  Growth hormones –  Synthetic drugs (e.g. anti-biotics) –  Radiation –  For Organic certification a multi-ingredient product must

contain at least 70% organic ingredients

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 45

Ecological Management

!  Broadening of notion of cultural control in order to maximize benefits from ecosystem services supplied by native biodiversity

!  All biodiversity levels are affected by agricultural practices – Pollinators, predators, parasitoids,

microbes!

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 46

Ecological Mgmt

!  Countering the errors committed in the past by industrialized agriculture – Habitat loss – Use of chemical pesticides –  Introduction of exotic species –  Introduction of exotic diseases/pests

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 47

Habitat Management for Biodiversity!

!  Habitat (overwintering, refuge, mating) !  Alternate food sources

BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 48

Cost Benefit Analysis of Eco-Agriculture

!  Ecological methods are more expensive

– However, not subsidized – Loss of yield –  Increased maintenance/human-power – Subsidy to chemical industries – BUT: Diminished costs for ecosystem services

!  Market demand creates incentives – Higher prices per bushel on Eco-Ag (organic

and others)

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BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment BIO 4101: Pesticides and the Environment 49

References

!  McEwen and Stephenson. 1979. The use and significance of pesticides in the environment. John Wiley and Sons publication.

!  Pedigo and Rice. 2006. Entomology and Pest Management, 5th ed. Peason Publishing.

!  Van Emden and Peakall. 1996. Beyond Silent Spring: Integrated Pest Management and Chemical Safety. Chapman and Hall.

!  Regnault-Roger, Philogène and Vincent. 2005. Biopesticides of Plant Origin. Lavoisier.