1 / 21

Dr. Bajnóczy Gábor Tonkó Csilla

BUDAPEST UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY AND ECONOMICS. DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESS ENGINEERING. FACULTY OF CHEMICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ENGINEERING. PESTICIDES. Dr. Bajnóczy Gábor Tonkó Csilla. PESTICIDES. Why they are necessary?.

jbruce
Download Presentation

Dr. Bajnóczy Gábor Tonkó Csilla

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BUDAPEST UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY AND ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESS ENGINEERING FACULTY OF CHEMICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ENGINEERING PESTICIDES Dr. Bajnóczy Gábor Tonkó Csilla

  2. PESTICIDES Why they are necessary? Insects, rodents, weeds, fungi are competitors in human feeding. Used chemical matters against them : pesticides Success is not exclusive ↔ significant environmental damage Groups of pesticides (by effects): • Insecticides • Fungicides • Herbicides • Rodenticides • Molluscicides • Akaricides • Nematocides

  3. TYPES OF PESTICIDES (BY CHEMICAL ASPECT) Chlorinated hydrocarbons (insecticides) Limited utilization Carbamates (insecticides) Aim: substitution of organophosphates Chlorophenoxy acides (weed killers) Significant amount Pyrethroids (insecticides) Aim: production of natural pesticides Organophosphates (insecticides) Aim: substitution of chlorinated hydrocarbons Other heterocycle compounds

  4. MOST IMPORTANT PROPERTIES OF PESTICIDES (ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS) Lifetime of pesticides: The lifetime of a pesticide is the time after which 95 % efficiency reduction occurs at ambient conditions Fast degradable agents: degradation 1 – 12 weeks Moderately fast degradable agents: degradation 1 – 18 months Slowly degradable agents: degradation more than 2 years Disadvantage of slow degradation: a./ accumulation in food chain b./ development of resistance New type of pesticides: fast degradationis advantageous Degradation types: biological, photochemical, water hydrolyses

  5. TOXIC EFFECT TO LIVING ORGANISMS Most commonly used: LD50 (lethal dose) • amount of material [mg / bodymass kg] causes 50% death in the population examined during the test period (e.g. 24 hours). • LD50 value depend on the way of poison acces: oral or dermal. Poison category acute, oral LD50 [mg/body mass kg] Strong poison < 50 Poison 50 – 500 Weak poison 500 – 5000 Non-toxic > 5000 measured in rats

  6. TOXIC EFFECT TO LIVING ORGANISMS toxic effect of pesticide to small mammals (rat) oral LD50 dermal LD50 *[mg / bm kg] *[mg / bm kg] Chlorinated hydrocarbon DDT 200 – 400 Organophosphates malathion 100 – 200 2000 – 3000 dichlorophosphate 10 – 80 100 – 200 Carbamates carbaryl 300 – 2000 pyrethroids 250 - 1500 *[mg / bm kg] = [mg / bodymass kg] Pyrethroids: mammals –> good resistance fishes –> LD50 in 1,8 μg/ water dm3 96 hours

  7. CHLORINATED HYDROCARBONS The best know: DDT Catch in membrane pore of nerve tissue → inhibition of nerve transfer. Non-chemical effect. Stereo chemically similar compounds: DDT effect is observed Non-polar – solubility is negligible in water (this was thought) Large amount of DDT has been sprayed. http://www.whale.to/vaccines/ddt_spraying.html http://www.life.com/animals-pictures/50531439/mobile-ddt-spraying-machine-in-action

  8. DDT ACCUMULATION IN FOOD CHAIN birds freshwater fish sea fish water plants plankton invertebrates fresh water sea water DDT conc. of sea water = 1 ppb → DDT conc. of oyster: DDT ~ 70 ppm Degree of enrichment: 70 000 !!

  9. EFFECT OF DDT ACCUMULATION Increased DDT level increases the amount of cytochrome P-450 enzyme. The non selective oxidizing enzyme oxidizes not only the DDT, but other Important hormones e.g. estradiol (responsible of the calcium intake into the egg shell. ? low calcium content of egg shell: eggs break under penguin fast degradable agent: biological accumulation has less opportunity

  10. FORMATION OF RESISTANCE I. If the organism contested gets less than the lethal dose it has opportunity to learn how organization protect themselves against the effects of the pesticide. This ability developed is heritable. Due to the apolar skin only apolar pesticides are able to penetrate the skin. enzyme non-polar pesticide polar molecule fast, easy excreted by urine In case of rapidly degrade pesticides the time is short to create the defense!

  11. FORMATION OF RESISTANCE II. In case of a significant number of individuals (millions) due to the biological diversification there are existingindividuals which already have a deactivating enzyme that can disarm the pesticide applied. The capability of existing defence is heritable. In this case, the pesticide lifetime life is irrelevant.

  12. FORMATION OF RESISTANCE III. disarming options of non-polar DDT molecule in wildlife mosquito stable fly mammals fruit fly toxic, non-polar molecule non toxic, polar molecule urine

  13. CHLORINATED HYDROCARBONS TODAY Forbidden or significantly limited: on the northern hemisphere of the Earth In some developing countries, due to the large number of diseases (malaria, yellow fever) and the food production threatened by pests now the ban could not be done. The crop contaminated by chlorinated hydrocarbons, once it enters the EU moves freely in the member states. opportunities in Africa premature death (famine or disease) longer life but chronic effect of chlorinated hydrocarbons http://www.eoearth.org/article/Chemical_use_in_Africa:_opportunities_and_risks

  14. ORGANOPHOSPHATES Developed instead of chlorinated hydrocarbons faster degradation → difficult to develop resistance and accumulation Y X and Y : sulfur or oxygen R R, R’ : hydrocarbon, oxygen content is possible P X Z R’ Z : complex organic group The acetylcholine plays a significant role in the nerve transfer among the nerve cells. After the job is finished, the enzyme acetylcholin is decayed by acetylcholine esterase. Organophosphates block the acetylcholine esterase. Acute toxicity to humans and animals as well ! The toxic potency can be influenced by the quality of the chemical groups! Freely available or official authorization is necessary for purchase.

  15. ORGANOPHOSPHATES Ester bond degrades rapidly under environmental conditions Disadvantage: frequent use is necessary Hydrolysis and conversion of parathion S (RO) 2 NO P O 2 (RO) 2 over time, transformed into another toxic substance oxygen (air) water O (RO) S 2 NO P O 2 (RO) 2 (RO) P O H HO NO 2 2 toxic (RO) 2 hydrolysis → non-toxic compounds non-toxic non-toxic bacterial transformation biological decay O HO NH 2 HO P O H HO conjugation to humic acids

  16. CARBAMATES Developed to substitute organophophates Insecticide effect, less toxic to mammals, fast degradable agent bacterial decay light water

  17. CARBAMATES degradation of carbamates → hydroxy naphthalenes incorporation into the humic acid contentof the soil STRUCTURE OF HUMIC ACID

  18. PYRETHROIDS Any of several synthetic compounds similar to pyrethrin, used as an insecticide. Pyrethrin: multicomponent insecticid effect agent from powdered flower of Dalma flowers (Chrysanthemum cinerariaefolium) Disadvantage: easy deagradation in visible light Advantage: natural, household utilisation, non-toxic effect to mammals. Synthetic pyrethroids: pyrethrin base compounds: permethrin, cypermethrin, deltamethrin etc. effect: long-term, slightly toxic to mammals, toxic to bees and fishes ( 2.0 μg/dm3, lethal effect on carp after 96 hours) Permethrin

  19. THIRD GENERATION INSECTICIDES First generation insecticides: agents before World War II. - toxic inorganic compounds (lead-arsenate, mercury and lead-containing compounds) - toxic organic compounds, e.g. nicotine, pyrethrin Second generation insecticides: - synthetic insecticides(chlorinated hydrocarbons, organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids) Third generation insecticides: - attractive materials (detection of swarming period → sprayingin right time → decreasing the unnecessary amount of pesticide) - pheromones (sex pheromones – can disturb reproduction) - viruses (specifically killing organisms) - hormones (effect on insects evolution, effective only in a particular stage of life)                   - sterilization (inhibition of reproduction e.g. with irradiation)

  20. Herbicides Chlorophenoxy acids (amine salts and esters) 2,4 - dichlorophenoxi acetic acid (2,4-D) 2,4,5 - trichlorophenoxi acetic acid (2,4,5-T) Hormonal effect agent against dicotyledonous weeds Forced fast growing → not enough nutrient → decay of plant Pesticides used in the largest quantity in the world. Degradation is a few weeks in soil. Low toxic effect to invertebrates, vertebrates, but the chronic effect is not clearly demonstrated.

  21. DEGRADATION OF CHLOROPHENOXY ACIDS IN THE ENVIRONMENT Microbiological degradation Dispersion of large amount of chlorophenoxy acids (Vietnam War, Agent Orange) terratogen effect to population Cause: by-product: dioxine (in ppm) range

More Related