pesticides, diseases, and ddt

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Pesticides, diseases, and DDT 1)What are two ways chemicals get into the environment? b) What is the difference between persistent and non-persistent? 2) What is the difference between pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides? 3)What does ingestion and absorption mean? 4) What is one pro and one con for DDT?

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Pesticides, diseases, and DDT. What are two ways chemicals get into the environment? b ) What is the difference between persistent and non-persistent? 2) What is the difference between pesticides , herbicides, and insecticides ? What does ingestion and absorption mean? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Pesticides, diseases, and DDT1) What are two ways chemicals get into the environment?

b) What is the difference between persistent and non-persistent?

2) What is the difference between pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides?

3) What does ingestion and absorption mean?

4) What is one pro and one con for DDT?

Page 2: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Looking at this photo: How are chemicals getting into our water system?

Page 3: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Types of wastesNon- persistent: Will break down by natural ways in the environment. Ex) sewage

Persistent: Will not break down in the environment very easily. Ex) DDT, mercury

Page 4: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Pesticides

Pesticide: Herbicides Insecticides

What they control plants insects

Example pests Weeds Mosquitoes

Example pesticides Roundup DDT

Page 5: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT

• Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane

… We’ll just call it DDT

Page 6: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT

- Used in WWII to exterminate lice.

PRO

Page 7: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT: Lice/Typhus- The lice carried the disease typhus, which cause devastating effects, sometimes even death, on the soldiers.

PRO

Page 8: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT: Mosquitoes/ malaria- Mosquitoes carry malaria, which causes your red blood cells to burst open. This means they can no longer carry oxygen.

PRO

Page 9: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Pros of DDT:

- In African countries, the use of DDT caused a drop of malaria from 70% to 5% in just 6 years.

PRO

Page 10: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

How DDT gets into organisms

Ingestion: eat it. Digestive system

Inhalation: Breath it in. Respiratory system

Absorption: absorbed through the skin. Circulatory system

Page 11: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Evidence against DDT-It has a half-life of 12 years. Meaning it does not leave the environment for many many generations.

- It is fat-soluble meaning it dissolves into fat stores and stays in organisms for decades.

CON

Page 12: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Peregrine Falcon-Stops the flow of calcium from mother to eggs. This meant the eggs were not at thick and strong as they should be.- These brittle eggs would break, resulting in less falcons making it to adulthood.- These birds almost went extinct

CON

Page 13: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT: collects in the food chain- As DDT moves up the food chain. More of it collects in the fat stores of animals.

Page 14: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Biomagnification

- Build up of substances, such as pesticides, in an organism.

- It is being absorbed faster than the substance is lost.

Page 15: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

DDT debate

• Life-saving or life-threatening?

Page 16: Pesticides, diseases, and DDT

Pesticides, diseases, and DDT1) What are two ways chemicals get into the environment?

b) What is the difference between persistent and non-persistent?

2) What is the difference between pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides?

3) What does ingestion and absorption mean?

4) What is one pro and one con for DDT?