Week 12 - Increasing Yields, Selective Breeding, Controlling Pests and Environmental Management

Exercise 4.3


Lesson 4.3: Controlling Weeds and Pests


ACTIVITY A: What is a Pest?



Required Readings

Science in Action 7
page 160
or

Science Focus 7
pages 163 to 165



What is a pest and why do we spend so much time and money trying to control them? Do the things that we call pests also think of themselves as pests?

As the human population continues to grow, we continue to use technology and science to help us produce more food. We create large continuous fields of the same kinds of food called Monocultures. Wheat, canola, oats and barley grow for endless kilometres on the open prairie. What are the positive and negative effects of this type of farming?

In order to protect crops and increase yield, farmers and foresters will use any number of methods. Each of these methods will have consequences that can be both detrimental and advantageous to the grower. Sometimes, we do something to fix a problem and find that we have accidentally created a whole new problem. In coming up with solutions, we must look at the whole picture.

In 1939, the chemical DDT was discovered to be a powerful insecticide. From that time until 1960, it was extensively used to prevent disease and increase crop yield, by killing insects. However, in the 1950s, scientists began to notice that some birds of prey were decreasing in numbers. Upon closer examination, they found that DDT builds up in the fatty tissue of the birds that eat these insects. Through experimentation, scientists found out that DDT interfered with the ability of mother birds to provide enough calcium to harden the shells of their eggs. Therefore, the bird numbers were decreasing because their young would not survive. In some places around the world today, DDT is still being used. What effect would this have on Canada? What effect does this have on the global food chain?



ACTIVITY B: Pesticides


Required Readings

Science in Action 7
page 161
or

Science Focus 7
pages 168 to 169

Controlling weeds with herbicides and insecticides remains the most effective and widely used method worldwide. Other control methods are either too costly or labour intensive to be widely adopted, or the level of control is not considered acceptable. The human society has become dependent on the current level of food supply that not controlling weeds and pests is not an option. Insects and disease consume over 50% of Canada's annual forest crop. As we make our regular visits to the grocery stores, we have come to expect high quality produce at relatively low cost. This is made possible through chemical applications.

Herbicides are chemicals that kill targeted plants considered to be pests by man. Man considers weeds to be competitors for their main crop. They take valuable nutrients and water from the soil, and they compete for sunlight with the desired crop, thus reducing yield. For instance, the common dandelion stores nutrients in its roots through the summer so that in early spring it can get a strong start before the competitors. Its broad leaves allow dandelions to shade out many of the plants they grow with. They are able to create seeds all summer long, each flower creating hundreds of seeds which are carried a long distance by the wind. They are adapted to all kinds of soil, including those with poor nutrients. They are even well adapted to lawns that are frequently mowed. To top this all off, dandelions also release a chemical agent to slow down the growth of grass and other plants nearby. Herbicide and fertilizer combinations such as "Weed and Feed" are used by consumers to not only make the grass on a lawn healthier, but also to kill the weeds.

An insecticides is also a chemical control, but meant to kill insects instead of plants. Unfortunately, insecticides can also kill helpful insects, such as those that pollinate crops. Some insects are food for other animals. By using insecticides, these animals will have less food, or will be harmed by eating poisoned insects, or drinking water that has been contaminated by insecticides.

One of the issues with using chemical control pesticides is the ability for insects and weeds to become resistant to the chemicals. In other words, as insects reproduce very quickly, they can often rapidly adapt to the new challenges in their environment. So let's take a field, and say that we spray it and 99% of the insects die, but 1% do not. This 1% will reproduce, and the next time a chemical is sprayed, their offspring will have a higher chance of surviving. Scientists have discovered that as pesticide use increases, the number of insect species resistant to pesticides increases as well. Food producers should be aware of this, and only use pesticides when absolutely necessary. The only way to deal with resistant insects is to use higher doses of the chemical, or develop new pesticides. One of the major human concerns with pesticides is whether or not they are still in our food when we buy them at the grocery store. Some have thought that pesticides may be linked to cancer. We have a delicate sustainability issue. Do we attempt to produce food with chemical controls that have high yields and can feed the world's population, but risk the side effects of ingesting pesticides. Just as in the example of the birds of prey and DDT, how much bioaccumulation of chemicals can the human body sustain without there being any harmful effects?

Just as we worry about pesticides bioaccumulating in our bodies, we have to worry about what happens to pesticides as some of them wash off plants and leave residue in the soil and water. If the pesticide doesn't easily decompose, it can build up, making the soil potentially toxic and the water undrinkable.

Exercise 4.3A - Pests and Pesticides

 



ACTIVITY C: Biological Controls & Introduced Species

Required Readings

Science in Action 7
pages 162
or

Science Focus 7
pages 173

If you don't want to use chemical controls to decrease pests, you may have to take a look at biological controls. This is when a natural predator is used to control a pest. So in essence, we are making use of the natural food chain. Some growers use ladybugs and wasps to control pests such as aphids or white flies. The praying mantis can be brought in to control grasshoppers, and ground beetles can help with an overabundance of caterpillars. Unlike chemical controls, biological controls do not get rid of all the pests. They just change the balance in the environment so there are fewer pests. With this method, farmers must be patient, as biological controls can take awhile to work, and are not useful for large outbreaks.

Farmers and growers regularly walk through their fields. When they see pests eating away at their profits, they want to be able to react quickly. When chemical and biological controls have not been available, other methods have been used in desperation. In a few cases, foreign species have been introduced to take care of a pest without understanding the consequences the new species would have on the environment. Currently, many of the worst weeds and insect pests were exotic species intentionally introduced from other regions.

In order to protect sugar cane fields in Australia, the cane toad was introduced in 1935 at an experimental station to help combat the cane beetle. At that time, the cane beetle was decimating sugar cane crops. It was thought that the cane toad would eat the cane beetles. When it was released into the cane fields, a major ecological disaster began. Not only did the toad not eat the cane beetle in the fields, they ate everything else that came into their range, including snakes, lizards, frogs, and marsupials. To make matters worse, there was nothing in the local food chain that could keep them from reproducing rapidly. Any animal that attempted to eat one of the toads usually ended up dead due to their strong poison. Currently, cane toads are expanding their range throughout Australia at the rate of 30-50 kilometers per year. The toads like to live in urban centers as well. Millions have moved into urban areas and have become a major nuisance.

Exercise 4.3B - Biological Controls

 



ACTIVITY D: Organic Food Production

Required Readings

Science in Action 7
no readings

or

Science Focus 7
pages 172 to 173



Large farms that primarily produce monocultures are very limited in the
control methods they can use. If the farm does not need to be as large, other methods can be adopted. However, the end product of these methods will tend to be more expensive due to high costs and additional labour. Organic food production describes food that has been grown without the use of chemical fertilizers or chemical pesticides. In order to make this possible, organic farmers have to increase the biodiversity to reduce problems with weeds, insects, fungal diseases, and the drain on nutrients in the soil. They fight weeds and other pests using a combination of tilling, crop rotation, mulching, and planting their crops with companion plants that discourage insects. In some instances, they may remove insects and weeds by hand. Obviously, this is only practical on small scales.

Farmers who chose to run organic food productions must pass strict inspections in order to be certified as organic. Producing without chemicals can be very expensive and requires much extra monitoring and lots of extra work. Nonetheless, organic growers can demand higher prices for their produce, and their land has less chance of residue buildup. Consumers who buy organic foods will pay a little bit more for their food, but have less worry about bioaccumulation of chemicals.

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