Pesticide

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A pesticide is a chemical used to control, to repel, to attract or to kill pests, for example, insects, weeds, birds, mammals, fish, or microbes, considered a nuisance. Pesticides are usually but not always poisons.

Examples of pesticides


Chemical engineers continually develop new pesticides to produce enhancements over previous generations of products.

DDT is an example of a once heavily used pesticide, while glyphosate today is the world's most used herbicide.

Some crops, such as BT Corn, are genetically engineered to create their own pesticides.

In the US, all materials intended for sale and use as pesticides must be registered with the EPA. The process may be long, complex, and expensive, because research must prove that the material is effective against the intended pest, yet safe to use. During the registration processs a pesticide label is created, which has directions for proper use of the material. Use not consitent with the label is pesticide misuse.

Some pesticides are considered too hazardous for sale to the general public, and these are designated restricted pesticides. Only certified applicators, who have taken a course and passed an examination, may purchase and use restricted pesticides. Records of sales and use are kept, and can be auditied by the EPA.

"Read and follow label directions." is often quoted by county extension agents, garden columnists and others teaching about pesticides. This is not merely good advice; it is the law, for the USA. Similar laws exist in much of the rest of the world. The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act of 1972 (FIFRA) set up the current system of pesticide regulations. It was amended somewhat by the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996. Its purpose is to make pesticide manufacture, distrubution and use as safe as possible. The most important point for users to understand is that it a crime to apply any pesticide, intentionally or unintentionally, in a manner not in accordance with the label for that pesticide.

Most pesticides present some danger to humans when used to control weeds or insects on food crops. This is the basis for the organic food movement. Certain food crops such as apples, peppers, celery, cherries, grapes, nectarines, peaches, pears, potatoes, red raspberries, spinach, and strawberries contain significant amounts of residual pesticide after being washed or peeled. These crops are the so-called dirty dozen as designated by the Environmental Working Group which has issued a Shopper's Guide to Pesticides in Produce.

Besides human health risks, pesticides also pose dangers to the environment. Non-target organisms can be severely impacted. In some cases where a pest insect normally has some controls from a beneficial insect predator or parasite, an insecticide application can kill both pest and beneficial. The control insect almost always takes longer to recover than the pest. Applications for adult mosquitoes, for example, may momentarily depress mosquito populations, but cause a larger population in the long run, by damaging controlling factors. Pesticides are also a factor in pollinator decline, which is a food supply issue.

See also herbicide -- DDT See also pesticide misuse See also FIFRA

References

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