BIOPESTICIDES
- February 13, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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BIOPESTICIDES
TOPIC: Agriculture
Context- As the government has changed the narrative towards a chemical-free farming, It needs to allow import of new tech in biopesticides’
Concept-
Biopesticides:
- Biopesticides are biologically based agents used for the control of plant pests. They can be living organisms (nematodes or micro-organisms) or naturally occurring substances, such as plant extracts or insect pheromones.
- Biopesticides are usually inherently less toxic than conventional pesticides.
- Biopesticides generally affect only the target pest and closely related organisms, in contrast to broad spectrum, conventional pesticides that may affect organisms as different as birds, insects and mammals.
- Biopesticides often are effective in very small quantities and often decompose quickly, resulting in lower exposures and largely avoiding the pollution problems caused by conventional pesticides.
Types of Biopesticides
- Biochemical Pesticides: They are naturally occurring substances that control pests by non-toxic mechanisms.
- Biochemical pesticides include substances that interfere with mating, such as insect sex pheromones, as well as various scented plant extracts that attract insect pests to traps.
- Microbial Pesticides: They consist of a microorganism (e.g. a bacterium, fungus, virus or protozoan) as the active ingredient.
- Microbial pesticides can control many different kinds of pests, although each separate active ingredient is relatively specific for its target pest(s).
- For example, there are fungi that control certain weeds and other fungi that kill specific insects.
- The most widely used microbial pesticides are subspecies and strains of Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt.
- Plant Incorporated Protectants: They are pesticidal substances that plants produce from genetic material that has been added to the plant.