Dictionary Definition
pesticide n : a chemical used to kill pests (as
rodents or insects)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
pesticide (pesticides)- A substance, usually synthetic although sometimes biological used to kill or contain the activities of pests
Related terms
Translations
- Finnish: tuholaismyrkky
- French: pesticide
- German: Pestizid
- Italian: pesticida
- Swedish: bekämpningsmedel , pesticid
Italian
Adjective
pesticide- Feminine plural form of pesticida
Extensive Definition
A pesticide is a substance or mixture of
substances used for preventing, controlling, or lessening the
damage caused by a pest. A
pesticide may be a chemical substance, biological
agent (such as a virus or bacteria), antimicrobial, disinfectant or
device used against any pest. Pests
include insects, plant
pathogens, weeds,
molluscs, birds, mammals, fish, nematodes (roundworms) and microbes that compete with
humans for food, destroy property, spread or are a vector
for disease or cause a nuisance. Although there are benefits to the
use of pesticides, there are also drawbacks, such as potential
toxicity to humans and other animals.
Types of pesticides
There are multiple ways of classifying pesticides.- Algicides or Algaecides for the control of algae
- Avicides for the control of birds
- Bactericides for the control of bacteria
- Fungicides for the control of fungi and oomycetes
- Herbicides for the control of weeds
- Insecticides for the control of insects - these can be Ovicides (substances that kill eggs), Larvicides (substances that kill larvae) or Adulticides (substances that kill adult insects)
- Miticides or Acaricides for the control of mites
- Molluscicides for the control of slugs and snails
- Nematicides for the control of nematodes
- Rodenticides for the control of rodents
- Virucides for the control of viruses (e.g. H5N1)
Pesticides can also be classed as synthetic
pesticides or biological
pesticides (biopesticides), although the distinction can
sometimes blur.
Broad-spectrum pesticides are those that kill an
array of species, while narrow-spectrum, or selective pesticides
only kill a small group of species.
A systemic pesticide moves inside a plant
following absorption by the plant. With insecticides and most
fungicides, this movement is usually upward (through the xylem) and outward. Increased
efficiency may be a result. Systemic insecticides which poison
pollen and nectar in the flowers may kill needed pollinators such as bees.
Most pesticides work by poisoning pests.
Uses, benefits and drawbacks
Pesticides are used to control organisms which are considered harmful. For example, they are used to kill mosquitoes that can transmit potentially deadly diseases like west nile virus and malaria. They can also kill bees, wasps or ants that can cause allergic reactions. Insecticides can protect animals from illnesses that can be caused by parasites such as fleas. Uncontrolled pests such as termites and mould can damage structures such as houses. One study found that not using pesticides reduced crop yields by about 10%.DDT, sprayed on the
walls of houses, is an organochloride that has been used to fight
malaria since the 1950s.
Recent policy statements by the World
Health Organization have given stronger support to this
approach. Dr. Arata
Kochi, WHO's malaria chief, said, "One of the best tools we
have against malaria is indoor residual house spraying. Of the
dozen insecticides WHO has approved as safe for house spraying, the
most effective is DDT." Scientists estimate that DDT and other
chemicals in the organophosphate class of pesticides have saved 7
million human lives since 1945 by preventing the transmission of
diseases such as malaria, bubonic
plague, sleeping
sickness, and typhus.
A study for the World
Health Organization in 2000 from Vietnam established that
non-DDT malaria controls were significantly more effective than DDT
use.
In the US, about a quarter of pesticides used are
used in houses, yards, parks, golf courses, and swimming
pools.
In 1939, Paul
Müller discovered that DDT was a very
effective insecticide. It quickly became the most widely-used
pesticide in the world.
In the 1940s manufacturers began to produce large
amounts of synthetic pesticides and their use became widespread.
Some sources consider the 1940s and 1950s to have been the start of
the "pesticide era." Pesticide use has increased 50-fold since 1950
and 2.5 million tons (2.3 million metric tons) of industrial
pesticides are now used each year.
Regulation
In most countries, in order to sell or use a pesticide, it must be approved by a government agency. For example, in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) does so. Complex and costly studies must be conducted to indicate whether the material is safe to use and effective against the intended pest. During the registration process, a label is created which contains directions for the proper use of the material. Based on acute toxicity, pesticides are assigned to a Toxicity Class.Some pesticides are considered too hazardous for sale to the general
public and are designated restricted
use pesticides. Only certified applicators, who have passed an
exam, may purchase or supervise the application of restricted use
pesticides. The Ontario provincial government promised on September
24, 2007
to also implement a province-wide ban on the cosmetic use of lawn
pesticides, for protecting the public. Medical and environmental
groups support such a ban. On April 22,
2008, the
Provincial Government of Ontario announced that it will pass
legislation that will prohibit, province-wide, the cosmetic use and
sale of lawn and garden pesticides. The Ontario legislation would
also echo Massachusetts law requiring pesticide manufacturers to
reduce the toxins they use in production. The Province of Prince
Edward Island is also considering such legislation. On April 3, 2008, the Canadian
Cancer Society released opinion poll results conducted by Ipsos
Reid, which established that a clear majority of residents in the
provinces of British Columbia and Saskatchewan want province-wide
cosmetic lawn pesticide bans, and that the majority of respondents
believe that cosmetic pesticides are a threat to their
health.
Though pesticide regulations differ from country
to country, pesticides and products on which they were used are
traded across international borders. To deal with inconsistencies
in regulations among countries, delegates to a conference of the
United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization adopted an International Code
of Conduct on the Distribution and Use of Pesticides in 1985 to
create voluntary standards of pesticide regulation for different
countries. The FAO claims that the code has raised awareness about
pesticide hazards and decreased the number of countries without
restrictions on pesticide use.
Two other efforts to improve regulation of
international pesticide trade are the
United Nations London Guidelines for the Exchange of Information on
Chemicals in International Trade and the United
Nations Codex Alimentarius Commission. The former seeks to
implement procedures for ensuring that prior informed consent
exists between countries buying and selling pesticides, while the
latter seeks to create uniform standards for maximum levels of
pesticide residues among participating countries. Both initiatives
operate on a voluntary basis.
Environmental effects
Pesticide use raises a number of environmental concerns. Over 98% of sprayed insecticides and 95% of herbicides reach a destination other than their target species, including non-target species, air, water, bottom sediments, and food. Pesticide drift occurs when pesticides suspended in the air as particles are carried by wind to other areas, potentially contaminating them. Pesticides are one of the causes of water pollution, and some pesticides are persistent organic pollutants and contribute to soil contamination.Health effects
Pesticides can present danger to consumers, bystanders, or workers during manufacture, transport, or during and after use.The American Medical Association recommends
limiting exposure to pesticides and using safer alternatives: ''
Particular uncertainty exists regarding the long-term effects of
low-dose pesticide exposures. Current surveillance systems are
inadequate to characterize potential exposure problems related
either to pesticide usage or pesticide-related
illnesses…Considering these data gaps, it is prudent…to limit
pesticide exposures…and to use the least toxic chemical pesticide
or non-chemical alternative.''
Farmers and workers
There have been many studies of farmers with the goal of determining the health effects of pesticide exposure.The World Health Organisation and the UN
Environment Programme estimate that each year, 3 million
workers in agriculture in the developing world experience severe
poisoning
from pesticides, about 18,000 of whom die.
Organophosphate
pesticides have increased in use, because they are less damaging to
the environment and they are less persistent than organochlorine
pesticides. These are associated with acute health problems for
workers that handle the chemicals, such as abdominal pain,
dizziness, headaches, nausea, vomiting, as well as skin and eye
problems. Additionally, many studies have indicated that pesticide
exposure is associated with long-term health problems such as
respiratory problems, memory disorders, dermatologic conditions,
cancer, depression,
neurological
deficits, miscarriages, and birth
defects. Summaries of peer-reviewed research have examined the
link between pesticide exposure and neurologic outcomes and
cancer, perhaps the two
most significant things resulting in organophosphate-exposed
workers.
According to researchers from the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), licensed pesticide
applicators who used chlorinated pesticides on more than 100 days
in their lifetime were at greater risk of diabetes. In a paper appearing
in the May, 2008, issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology,
researchers said the associations between specific pesticides and
incident diabetes ranged from a 20 percent to a 200 percent
increase in risk. New cases of diabetes were reported by 3.4
percent of those in the lowest pesticide use category compared with
4.6 percent of those in the highest category. Risks were greater
when users of specific pesticides were compared with applicators
who never applied that chemical.
Consumers
There are concerns that pesticides used to control pests on food crops are dangerous to people who consume those foods. These concerns are one reason for the organic food movement. Many food crops, including fruits and vegetables, contain pesticide residues after being washed or peeled. Chemicals that are no longer used but which are resistant to breakdown for long periods may remain in soil and water and thus in food.The United Nations Codex
Alimentarius Commission has recommended international standards
for Maximum
Residue Limits (MRLs), for individual pesticides in food.
In the EU, MRLs are set by
DG-SANCO.
In the US, levels of residues that remain on foods are limited to
tolerance levels that are established by the US EPA and are
considered safe. The EPA sets the tolerances based on the toxicity
of the pesticide and its breakdown products, the amount and
frequency of pesticide
application, and how much of the pesticide (i.e., the residue)
remains in or on food by the time it is marketed and prepared.
Tolerance levels are obtained using scientific risk assessments
that pesticide manufacturers are required to produce by conducting
toxicological studies, exposure modeling and residue studies before
a particular pesticide can be registered, however, the effects are
tested for single pesticides, and there is little information on
possible synergistic
effects of exposure to multiple pesticide traces in the air, food
and water.
A study published by the
United States National Research Council in 1993 determined that
for infants and children, the major source of exposure to
pesticides is through diet. A study in 2006 measured the levels of
organophosphorus
pesticide exposure in 23 school children before and after replacing
their diet with organic food
(food grown without synthetic pesticides). In this study it was
found that levels of organophosphorus
pesticide exposure dropped dramatically and immediately when the
children switched to an organic diet.
In the US, the
National Academy of Sciences estimates that between 4,000 and
20,000 cases of cancer are caused per year by pesticide residues in
food in allowable amounts.
For example, on page 30 is comprehensive data on
pesticides on fruits. Some example data: They were also able to
test for multiple pesticides within a single sample and found that:
- These data indicate that 29.5 percent of all samples tested
contained no detectable pesticides [parent
- compound and metabolite(s) combined], 30 percent contained 1 pesticide, and slightly over 40 percent
- contained more than 1 pesticide. - page 34.
- compound and metabolite(s) combined], 30 percent contained 1 pesticide, and slightly over 40 percent
To reduce the amounts of pesticide residues in
food, consumers can wash, peel, and cook their food; trim the fat
from meat; and eat a variety of foods to avoid repeat exposure to a
pesticide typically used on a given crop.
The public
Exposure routes other than consuming food that contains residues, in particular pesticide drift, are potentially significant to the general public.The Bhopal
disaster occurred when a pesticide plant released 40 tons of methyl
isocyanate (MIC) gas, intermediate chemical in the production
of some pesticides. The disaster immediately killed nearly 3,000
people and ultimately caused at least 15,000 deaths.
In China, an estimated half million people are
poisoned by pesticides each year, 500 of whom die.
Children have been found to be especially
susceptible to the harmful effects of pesticides. A number of
research studies have found higher instances of brain cancer,
leukemia and birth
defects in children with early exposure to pesticides, according to
the
Natural Resources Defense Council. Often used for ridding
school buildings of rodents, insects, pests, etc., pesticides only
work temporarily and must be re-applied. The poisons found in
pesticides are not selectively harmful to just pests and in
everyday school environments children (and faculty) are exposed to
high levels of pesticides and cleaning materials. "No testing has
ever been done specifically pertaining to threats among
children"
Peer-reviewed studies now suggest neurotoxic
effects on developing animals from organophosphate
pesticides at legally-tolerable levels, including fewer nerve cells,
lower birth
weights, and lower cognitive
scores. The EPA finished a 10 year
review of the organophosphate
pesticides following the 1996
Food Quality Protection Act, but did little to account for
developmental neurotoxic effects, drawing strong criticism from
within the agency and from outside researchers.
Some scientists think that exposure to pesticides
in the uterus may have
negative effects on a fetus that may manifest as
problems such as growth and behavioral disorders or reduced
resistance to pesticide toxicity later in life.
A new study conducted by the
Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, has discovered a 70%
increase in the risk of developing Parkinson's
disease for people exposed to even low levels of
pesticides.
A 2008 study from Duke University found that the
Parkinson's patients were 61 percent more likely to report direct
pesticide application than were healthy relatives. Both
insecticides and herbicides significantly increased the risk of
Parkinson's disease.
One study found that use of pesticides may be
behind the finding that the rate of birth defects such as missing or very small eyes is twice
as high in rural areas as in urban areas. Another study found no
connection between eye abnormalities and pesticides.
Continuing development
Pesticide safety education and pesticide applicator regulation are designed to protect the public from pesticide misuse, but do not eliminate all misuse. Reducing the use of pesticides and choosing less toxic pesticides may reduce risks placed on society and the environment from pesticide use. For example, potato cyst nematodes emerge from their protective cysts in response to a chemical excreted by potatoes; they feed on the potatoes and damage the crop. and the gypsy moth. However, this can be a costly, time consuming approach that only works on some types of insects.Some evidence shows that alternatives to
pesticides can be equally effective as the use of chemicals. For
example, Sweden has halved
its use of pesticides with hardly any reduction in crops. In
Indonesia, farmers have reduced pesticide use on rice fields by 65%
and experienced a 15% crop increase.
See also
- Agrichemicals
- Avicide
- Biological pesticide
- Daminozide or Alar
- DDT
- Endangered arthropod
- Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act
- Fungicide
- Herbicide
- Insecticide
- Integrated Pest Management
- List of environmental health hazards
- National Pesticide Information Center
- Non-pesticide management
- Nonpoint source pollution
- Organophosphate
- Pesticide application
- Pesticide formulation
- Pesticide misuse
- Pesticide poisoning
- Pesticide resistance
- Pesticide toxicity to bees
- Protectant
- Soil contamination
- Rodenticide
- The Pesticide Question: Environment, Economics and Ethics (book)
- Transgenic maize Bt corn
- UK Pesticides Campaign
- Water pollution
References
Further reading
Books
- Sittig's Handbook of Pesticides and Agricultural Chemicals
- Pesticide residues in food and drinking water
- Pesticides: problems, improvements, alternatives
- Pesticides in fruits and vegetables
- Pesticides: A Toxic Time Bomb in our Midst
- Pesticide Book
- Pesticide, veterinary and other residues in food
Journal Articles
- Tomlin, C.D.S. (Ed.) 2000 The Pesticide Manual 12th Edition, British Crop Protection Council, Bracknell, UK, 1250 pp.
News
External links
General information
- International Pesticide Application Research Centre (IPARC)
- PAN-UK. Working to eliminate the dangers of toxic pesticides, our exposure to them, and their presence in the environment where we live and work.
- National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC) Information about pesticide-related topics.
- Beyond Pesticides, founded in 1981 as the National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides - Source of information on pesticide hazards, least-toxic practices and products, and on pesticide issues. Website has Daily News Blog relating to pesticides.
- Cdms.net. All Supporting Agro-Chemical Manufacturers a list of EPA pesticide labels for pesticides by trade name.
- Compendium of Pesticide Common Names: Classified Lists of Pesticides Lists of pesticide names by type.
- Pesticide Action Network. PAN Pesticides Database. Compilation of multiple regulatory databases into a web-accessible form.
- Croplifeamerica.org, US trade association representing the crop protection and pest control industry
- US Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment Program. 1997 pesticide use map Shows estimates of pesticide type and intensity of pesticide use by business of mass food production.
Pesticide regulatory authorities
Human health
- Centers for Disease Control Pesticides. Compiled information on health effects of pesticides.
- NIH encyclopedia pages with emergency treatment of Insecticide exposure
- Durango Software - Provides risk assessment tools for pesticide use
- Environmental Working Group (July 14, 2005), The Pollution in Newborns.
- Pesticide Residues in Food - Data and Summary reports from the USDA on pesticide residues in food sold in the United States.
- Pesticides: Use, Effects, and Alternatives to Pesticides in Schools (pdf) from the United States General Accounting Office
- Pesticides and Health -- Greenpeace China
pesticide in Arabic: مبيد حشري
pesticide in Bosnian: Pesticidi
pesticide in Breton: Dilastezer
pesticide in Bulgarian: Пестицид
pesticide in Catalan: Plaguicida
pesticide in Czech: Pesticid
pesticide in Danish: Pesticid
pesticide in German: Pestizid
pesticide in Spanish: Pesticida
pesticide in Esperanto: Pesticido
pesticide in French: Pesticide
pesticide in Galician: Pesticida
pesticide in Hindi: कीटनाशक
pesticide in Italian: Pesticida
pesticide in Hebrew: הדברת מזיקים
pesticide in Lithuanian: Pesticidas
pesticide in Dutch: Chemisch
bestrijdingsmiddel
pesticide in Japanese: 農薬
pesticide in Norwegian: Pesticid
pesticide in Polish: Pestycydy
pesticide in Portuguese: Pesticida
pesticide in Romanian: Pesticid
pesticide in Quechua: Kuru qulluna
pesticide in Russian: Пестициды
pesticide in Simple English: Pesticide
pesticide in Slovenian: Pesticid
pesticide in Serbian: Пестициди
pesticide in Finnish: Torjunta-aine
pesticide in Swedish: Bekämpningsmedel
pesticide in Vietnamese: Thuốc trừ dịch
hại
pesticide in Ukrainian: Пестициди
pesticide in Chinese: 农药
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Cain,
aborticide, acaricide, anthelmintic, antibiotic, antiseptic, apache, assassin, assassinator, bactericide, bloodletter, bloodshedder, bravo, bug bomb, burker, butcher, button man, cannibal, carbamate
insecticide, chemosterilant,
chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide, contact poison, cutthroat, defoliant, desperado, disinfectant, eradicant, eradicator, executioner, exterminator, fratricide, fumigant, fungicide, garroter, genocide, germicide, gorilla, gun, gunman, gunsel, hatchet man, head-hunter,
herbicide, hit man,
homicidal maniac, homicide, infanticide, insect powder,
insecticide,
killer, man-eater,
man-killer, manslayer,
massacrer, matador, matricide, microbicide, miticide, murderer, organic chlorine,
organic phosphate insecticide, parricide, patricide, poison, poisoner, rat poison, regicide, roach paste, roach
powder, rodenticide,
slaughterer,
slayer, sororicide, stomach poison,
strangler, suicide, systemic, systemic insecticide,
thug, torpedo, toxic, toxicant, toxin, trigger man, uxoricide, venin, venom, vermicide, virus, weed killer