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Published byRosalyn Ross Modified over 9 years ago
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Pests and Pollinators
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The Terms: Pests and Weeds Pest: Any organism that damages crops that are valuable to us. Weed: any plant that competes with our crops.
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We have developed thousands of chemical pesticides. There are thousands of artificial chemicals developed to kill pests. Insecticides Herbicides Fungicides
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Pests Evolve Resistance to Pesticides
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Resistant Pests Green peach Aphid Colorado potato beetle Diamondback moth
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Biological Control Pits One Organism Against Another Biological control/biocontrol: “the enemy of one’s enemy is one’s friend”.
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Biological Control Agents Themselves May Become Pests
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Biocontrol “should be used with our eyes wide open—and as a last resort”---Daniel Simberloff “only a small percentage of efforts have resulted in demonstrable nontarget effects, and perhaps fewer than 10% of these effects were substantial.”---two British scientists reviewing cases from 2000
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Integrated Pest management combines Biocontrol and Chemical Methods Integrated Pest Management (IPM): Numerous techniques are integrated to achieve long-term suppression of pests, including biocontrol, use of chemicals when added, close monitoring of populations, habitat alteration, crop rotation, transgenic crops, alternative tillage methods, and mechanical pest removal.
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We depend on insects to pollinate crops Pollination: the process by which male sex cells of a plant (pollen) fertilize female sex cells of plant
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Pollinators CultivarsPercentage of Plants Cultivated by Them Bees73% Flies19% Wasps5% Beetles5% Moths and Butterflies4% Bats6.5% Birds4%
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U.S. Stamp Depicting Pollinators
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