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National Center for Food and Ag. Policy Washington, DC The Benefits of Agrochemical Research: Case Study of Imidacloprid Case Study of Imidacloprid Sujatha Sankula & Leonard Gianessi
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Agrochemical categories Herbicides (47%) Insecticides (29%) Fungicides (18%) Fumigants & growth regulators (6%)
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Agrochemicals are necessary to… Prevent yield losses Ensure quality Make crop production easier & cheaper
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Crop yield response to agrochemicals Theoretical attainable yield Without agrochemical use; With agrochemical use
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Area farmed globally for food production in 2000 Billion ha
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Global value of agrochemicals in 1998 $31.25 billion (crop uses) $10.5 billion (non-crop uses)
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Worldwide crop protection markets in 2001 Sales in mil. $
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Goal of a grochemical research Goal of a grochemical research To discover, develop, and understand new products for the safe and effective pest control and to maximize food production
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Agrochemical discovery & development programs are driven by: Agrochemical discovery & development programs are driven by: è Population growth è Food and health needs è Pest resistance issues è Safety considerations è Economic incentives è Replacements and phase-outs
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Recent setbacks to agrochemical discovery programs: Recent setbacks to agrochemical discovery programs: è Fewer players è Large investments è Great risks è High stakes è Economics è Higher standards of potency and safety
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Insecticide categories Organic (eg. DDT, chlorpyriphos) Botanicals (eg. pyrethrum, nicotine) Inorganic (eg. boric acid, sulfur)
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Market dominance of commercial insecticide categories Category # Category # Inorganics 8 Botanical 5 Synthetic organics 192
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Major insecticide classes by importance as of 1995 Class ~ Entry year Market value (%) Class ~ Entry year Market value (%) Chlorinated hydrocarbons1947 5 Chlorinated hydrocarbons1947 5 Organophosphates1965 34 Organophosphates1965 34 Methylcarbamates1969 20 Methylcarbamates1969 20 Pyrethroids1979 23 Pyrethroids1979 23 Benzoylureas1983 5 Benzoylureas1983 5 Others 1982 8 Others 1982 8
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Human toxicity and insect resistance to the first generation neuro-active insecticides such as carbamates and OPs led to the search for new agrochemicals Significant discovery - Imidacloprid
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Imidacloprid Classification: Chloronicotinyl First registered insecticide in its class Year of registration in US: 1995
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World sales of top selling pesticides in 2001 Glyphosate$2.4 billion Imidacloprid$540 million Source: PANUPS 2002
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Structural comparison of nicotine and imidacloprid
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Characteristics of imidacloprid Novel mode of action Broad spectrum of activity Favorable environment fate
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Mode of action of imidacloprid Binds to nerve receptors called nicotinic interferes acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), interferes with the transmission of stimuli in the insect nervous system leading to the accumulation of acetylcholine resulting in paralysis.
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Site of action is different than other insecticides Site of action is different than other insecticides to which insects developed resistance. to which insects developed resistance. Low toxicity to vertebrates due to low binding to nACh receptors.
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Imidacloprid provides a broad spectrum of activity against: Sucking insects (leaf and plant hoppers, aphids, thrips, whiteflies, scales, and plant bugs) Some coleopteran insects (CPB, leaf beetles) Select lepidopteran and dipteran insects No activity on mites and nematodes
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Imidacloprid has both contact and systemic action. Imidacloprid has both contact and systemic action. Imidacloprid can be applied as a soil, seed, or foliar treatment. Imidacloprid can be applied as a soil, seed, or foliar treatment. Readily absorbed by plant roots and transmitted through xylem. Effective at low rates than conventional insecticides (0.33 lb versus 1-2 lb of OPs)
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Trade names of imidacloprid Gaucho (seed treatment) Admire (soil applied) Provado (foliar)
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Use range of imidacloprid PotatoApple TomatoGrape BroccoliCitrus LettuceCorn SugarbeetHops CottonRice Tobacco
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Impacts of imidacloprid on US crop production
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Silverleaf whitefly First discovered in 1986 in FL Widespread damage in 1991 in CA and AZ Reduction in planted crop acreage Yield and quality losses; transmits viruses (ToMoV and YLCLV)
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Silverleaf whitefly is a billion dollar pest
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Primary hosts of silverleaf whitefly Broccoli Cauliflower Cabbage Lettuce Melons Cucumbers Tomatoes Cotton
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Silverleaf whitefly management Three classes of effective insecticides (pyrethroids, OPs, & chlorinated hydrocarbons) Most common combination: bifenthrin + endosulfan (2-3) fb. esfenvalerate + endosulfan (1-3) No residual control and periodic treatments (4-6 sprays) Insect resistance to three chemical classes
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Section 18 permits for imidacloprid (Admire) in California Broccoli/Cauliflower19931994 Lettuce19931994 Cucurbits19951997 Tomatoes1994 - First issueReissue
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Vegetable production statistics for CA Broccoli92 Lettuce 71 (head) 88 (leaf) Cauliflower89 Tomato32 (fresh) 92 (processed) Cantaloupe58 2001 Acreage (% of US total)
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Use of imidacloprid (Admire) in California in 1995 % treated acreage
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Impacts of imidacloprid (Admire) on CA crop production
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Number of insecticide applications with Admire and next best alternative # treatments
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Cost of insecticide programs with Admire and next best alternative Cost of programs ($)
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Yield increase due to Admire compared to traditional alternatives in CA % yield increase
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Value of delayed planting Warm weather: heavy whitefly pressure Growers shift the planting date to cooler periods to avoid peak infestations Imidacloprid facilitated marketing at the height of infestation
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Increase in grower benefits due to delayed planting facilitated by Admire % increase
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Impact of imidacloprid on insecticide use in FL fresh tomato for whitefly and other sucking pest control Buprofezin - 2000 Chlorpyrifos22,000 - Endosulfan89,000 34,900 Esfenvalerate 5,700 2,200 Imidacloprid - 8,400 Methamidophos74,500 9,100 Methomyl47,100 - Permethrin10,900 8,000 Total249,200 64,600 19922000 ------------- lb --------------
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Colorado Potato Beetle
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Green peach aphids
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Insecticide use: CPB/aphids 1920’s - 1940’sLead arsenate 1950’s - 1960’sDDT, Parathion, Endrin 1970’s - PresentAldicarb, Phorate, Methamidophos, Carbofuran, Endosulfan Permethrin
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CPB management problems CPB resistance to all synthetic insecticides registered for use Cross-resistance of CPB between insecticide classes Imidacloprid – unrelated chemistry and thus a new tool in resistance management programs
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Imidacloprid treated potato acreage (%) in 1999 Idaho 8 Maine90 Michigan93 Minnesota70 North Dakota68 Oregon35 Pennsylvania81 Washington 4 Wisconsin74
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Leading insecticides used for CPB control in 2001 (in order of importance) Imidacloprid Carbofuran Permethrin Phorate Esfenvalerate Endosulfan Methamidophos Azinophos-methyl Aldicarb Methyl parathion Dimethoate
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Reduction in insecticide use following imidacloprid use in potato (1994 –1999) % reduction Source: NASS
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Pierce’s disease on grapes
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Glassy-winged Bluegreen Sharpshooters
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Pesticides registered for sharpshooter control Dimethoate 1.32 Kaolin23.75 Imidacloprid 0.05 (Admire) Average use rate (lb/A)
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Other grape insects controlled by Admire Grape mealybug Vine mealybug Leafhopper Phylloxera
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Insect management problems in citrus in CA and FL Glassy-winged sharpshooter (overwintering host) California red scale (resistant to OP &carbamates) Citricola scale (increasing in problem) Brown citrus aphid (vectors citrus tristeza virus)
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Use of imidacloprid on citrus (Section 18 in CA and FL) Glassy-winged sharpshooter CA red scale Citrus brown aphid Citrus leaf miner
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Cotton pest problems Escalation of secondary pest problems Insecticide resistance
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Losses due to aphids in CA cotton in 1997 Crop loss Control costs Aphids3438 All insects and mites66 167 --------------- Million $ -----------------
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Imidacloprid treated cotton acreage in California % treated acres Source: NASS
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Summary Sucking pests have not been a significant problem to growers in the recent years, largely because of the advances in agrochemical research that resulted in the development of imidacloprid. American growers were able to increase crop yields, reduce crop production costs, and insecticide use following the introduction of imidacloprid. No agrochemical is immune to problems.
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Conclusions With the increasing safety and environmental concerns, there will be loss of some agrochemicals. Search for replacement products that can live up to both regulatory and grower standards necessitates continued agrochemical research. Agrochemical research should continue to meet the increasing demands of growing population. Continued agrochemical research will provide solutions to evolving pest and their management problems.
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