Revise: Food productionPesticides

A growing human population demands increased food production. Farmers try to meet that demand by intensive farming, using fertilisers and pesticides that are impacting on the environment.

Part ofBiologyRevision guides: Life on Earth

Pesticides

Chemical pesticides are substances that are sprayed onto crops to kill organisms that can reduce plant growth such as weeds, insects and fungi. Weeds compete with the crop plants for resources, fungi can cause plant diseases and insects may consume the plants and damage them.

Pesticides can have adverse effects on the environment if they are not biodegradable as they can accumulate in the bodies of organisms over time.

Because the animals tend to eat lots of organisms from the level below in food chains, the concentration of pesticide in the bodies of organisms increases at higher levels of food chains.

This can result in the of the pollutant reaching fatal levels in the organisms at the top of the food chain. This build-up of toxic substances in living organisms is known as bioaccumulation.

An example of a non-biodegradable, or persistent, pollutant is the insecticide DDT which was used in the 1940s to kill mosquitoes. It accumulates in body tissues because it is not very soluble in water so cannot be excreted.

The concentration of DDT in producers is very low, but increases greatly at higher levels in the food chain. This can cause top-level consumers like ospreys to lay eggs with much thinner shells that are more likely to break.

Pyramid showing how the concentration of pesticide rises during a food chain. 5 tiers, widest at bottom. Tier 1: pesticide in water 0.000003 ppm. Tier 2: pesticide in algae 0.04ppm. Tier 3: pesticide in mayfly nymph 0.5ppm. Tier 4: pesticide in sunfish 2ppm and finally tier 5: pesticide in great blue heron 25ppm.