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problems with pesticide control program nj department of environmental protection conventional pest control po box 420 trenton nj 08625 0420 the use of modern synthetic pesticides started during world war ...

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                                 Problems with                                     Pesticide Control Program 
                                                                                   NJ Department of  
                                                                                   Environmental Protection     
                     Conventional Pest Control                                     PO Box 420 
                                                                                   Trenton, NJ 08625-0420  
                                                                                                                            
                                                                                   
                  
                 The use of modern synthetic pesticides started during World War II with the advent of such 
                 chemicals as 2,4-D and DDT.  The effectiveness of these pesticides had dramatically improved 
                 the ability to kill pests, and because the potential applications seemed unlimited and the hazards 
                 minimal, pest control came to follow a distinct pattern: 
                     •   Sole reliance on chemicals 
                     •   Preventive or “calendar” spraying 
                     •   Application at the first sign of pests without establishing injury levels 
                     •   Little or no evaluation of treatments 
                     •   No system-wide perspective 
                  
                 Several problems associated with this pattern of use soon appeared: 
                 RESISTANCE:  Resistances to pesticide treatments were first noticed in flies, mosquitoes and 
                 later in cockroaches.  Due to genetic variation, certain pests may not be affected by a pesticide.  
                 A pesticide will kill most of the susceptible pests, leaving those most resistant to the pesticide to 
                 dominate reproduction.  This process of genetic selection now leaves pest populations of over 
                 800 species resistant to one or more pesticides.   
                 RESURGENCE:  Because pesticides may kill off the natural enemies of a pest, the pest 
                 population may rebound in numbers greater than before the application.  A further complication 
                 with the resistance problem is insect predators and parasites which prey on the pests are less 
                 likely to develop resistance to the pesticides used, reducing their ability keep the pest population 
                 in check. 
                 SECONDARY PEST OUTBREAK:  Pesticides may kill off not only the natural enemies of the 
                 pest concerned, but those of other pests as well, resulting in problems with pest species that were 
                 previously irrelevant. 
                 RESIDUES:  Because pesticides are difficult to confine to the target, residues may be left in the 
                 environment.  These may cause damage directly to wildlife and to man by occupational 
                 exposure, or indirectly through bio-magnification of pesticide concentrations in the food chain.  
                 Synergism, where mixed compounds cause a magnified effect greater than the individual 
                 compound effects added together, is also a problem brought about by residues, mixing with other 
                 environmental factors to increase toxic effects. 
                  
                  
        REGULATION:  Due to all of the aforementioned problems with conventional pesticide use, 
        the laws concerning pesticides have grown more restrictive, leading to increased research costs 
        to develop new pesticide formulations.  These higher costs are passed on to the pesticide 
        applicators and eventually the consumers themselves.   
        IPM (Integrated Pest Management) is probably the best alternative to curb the disadvantages 
        of a chemical pesticide only treatment pattern.  The IPM process uses regular monitoring to 
        determine if and when control measures are needed, and employs physical, cultural, and 
        biological tactics along side chemical treatments to keep pest populations low enough to prevent 
        economic damage or public annoyance.   
        In IPM programs, treatments are not made according to predetermined schedules; they are made 
        only when and where monitoring has indicated the pest will cause unacceptable economic, 
        medical or aesthetic damage.  Treatments are chosen and timed to be most effective and least 
        disruptive to natural pest controls. 
         
         
         
         
         
                                
                  Please contact the following if you need more information: 
                                
                       NJDEP Pesticide Control Program 
                        General information: 609-984-6507 
                      To report a pesticide misuse:  609-984-6568 
                          Website: www.pcpnj.org 
                                
                    National Pesticide Telecommunications Network 
                   For questions on possible health effects:  1-800-858-7378 
                                
                      New Jersey Poison Information System 
                For emergency situations involving pesticide exposure or poisoning: 
                            1-800-222-1222 
                                
                                                        
         
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...Problems with pesticide control program nj department of environmental protection conventional pest po box trenton the use modern synthetic pesticides started during world war ii advent such chemicals as d and ddt effectiveness these had dramatically improved ability to kill pests because potential applications seemed unlimited hazards minimal came follow a distinct pattern sole reliance on preventive or calendar spraying application at first sign without establishing injury levels little no evaluation treatments system wide perspective several associated this soon appeared resistance resistances were noticed in flies mosquitoes later cockroaches due genetic variation certain may not be affected by will most susceptible leaving those resistant dominate reproduction process selection now leaves populations over species one more resurgence off natural enemies population rebound numbers greater than before further complication problem is insect predators parasites which prey are less like...

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