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Chlorinated Hydrocarbons (Organochlorines) - DDT
Chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides, such as chlordane, DDT,
toxaphene, and dieldrin were the main family of insecticides
used following
their introduction after World War II. Many of these chemicals
originated from attempts to develop agents of chemical warfare,
but were found
to be lethal to insects. (3)
DDT is a man-made chemical widely used to control insects on agricultural crops
and insects
that carry diseases like malaria and typhus. The value of DDT
as an insecticide was first discovered in 1939 and the discoverer
won
the Nobel Prize(3). In the 1952 edition of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's book "Insects: The Yearbook of Agriculture," the
agency hailed it as one or our safest all-around insecticides based
on its "cost, ease of handling, safety to humans, effectiveness
in destroying the pest, and safety to wildlife." It was not until
decades later that the true impact of DDT on wildlife was known.
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Problems associated with DDT, as well as many chlorinated hydrocarbons,
involved their tendency to concentrate in the fat of humans, livestock,
aquatic foodchains, and wildlife. This latter phenomena, called
bioaccumulation, has had, and continues to have, severe adverse effects
on many forms of wildlife.
Many predatory birds were heavily imSeptember 3, 2008s, most notably the bald eagle, peregrine
falcon, and brown pelican were so heavily impacted by the pesticide
that they required federal listing under the Endangered Species Act. This was because the principal
metabolite (breakdown product) of DDT, DDE, prevents normal calcium
deposition during eggshell formation, causing females to lay thin-shelled
eggs that often break before hatching. In addition, DDT, DDE and
other chlorinated hydrocarbons, can affect the parents behavior
during incubation and can result in death of unhatched embryos and
eagle chicks.
The Service was heavily involved in studying the affects of DDT on fish and wildlife, a process which began shortly after the chemical came into use as a pesticide. By 1945, the Service determined that DDT is "Capable of Considerable Damage to Wildlife, Beneficial Insects, and Indirectly to Crops" (see News Release of August 22, 1945).
The Service continued to conduct studies on, and to voice its concern over, the effects of DDT on fish and wildlife for more than 25 years. It was not until 1972, and then because of the potential harm to human health, that the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) banned the use of DDT in the United
States barring a public health or economic emergency.
Restrictions
that control the use of aldrin and dieldrin were imposed in the
United States in 1974.
Since implementation of these restrictions,
residues of the pesticides have significantly decreased in many
regions where they were formerly used. However, DDT and DDE persist
in the environment for a very long time. DDT and DDE residues can
still be found in most areas of the United States.
Other chlorinated
hydrocarbon insecticides still being used in the US include dicofol
and endosulfan. Methoxychlor was another chlorinated hydrocarbon
permitted for use in the United States. However, in 2004, the EPA determined that methoxychlor was not eligible for reregistration .
US Fish and Wildlife Service Historic News Releases - DDT |
Common Myths About Rachel Carson and DDT:
1. DDT Has Been Banned in United States.
Only the GENERAL use of the pesticide has been banned in the United States. The EPA’s order did not affect public health and quarantine uses, or exports of DDT. In addition, the EPA maintains the ability to allow any Federal or State agency to use DDT if emergency conditions exist, including economic emergencies.
2. DDT was Banned Because it was Harmful to Wildlife.
Concerns about impacts to wildlife were not the only justification for the general ban on DDT. According to the EPA, the Agency banned the use of DDT because the widely-used pesticide was found to be "...accumulating in the food chain, posing a risk to public health and the environment.”(1)
This general use ban came after three years of intensive governmental inquiries into the uses of DDT. As a result of this examination, EPA determined that “the continued massive use of DDT posed unacceptable risks to the environment and potential harm to human health.” (2)
For more information on DDT and human health please visit the:
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry - ToxFAQs™
for
DDT, DDE, and DDD
3. Rachel Carson Called for the Elimination of All Pesticides.
“It is not my contention that chemical insecticides must never be used. I do contend that we have poisonous and biologically potent chemicals indiscriminately into the hands of person largely or wholly ignorant of their potentials for harm.” (3)
Carson encouraged the responsible use of pesticide with an awareness of the chemicals' impact on all living things, not the all-out banning of pesticides. In fact, in the context of malaria control, she argued that DDT users should "spray as little as you possibly can" rather than "spray to the limit of your capacity." (3)
In Audubon magazine she wrote, "We do not ask that all chemicals be abandoned. We ask moderation. We ask the use of other methods less harmful to our environment" (4). Countering claims that she was advocating a back-to-nature philosophy, she said, "We must have insect control. I do not favor turning nature over to insects. I favor the sparing, selective and intelligent use of chemicals. It is the indiscriminate, blanket spraying that I oppose" (5).
This approach of controlling pests today underlies Integrated Pest Management (IPM), which integrates a number of useful strategies — cultural, mechanical or physical, biological, and chemical — into an ecologically sound and economically viable program. This management technique is used extensively in managing the Service's National Wildlife Refuges.
Other Links:
Division of Environmental Quality - Pest Management (IPM)
U.S. Department of State's Bureau of International Information Programs - Rachel Carson: A Persistent Controversy,
a Still Valid Warning
(1) [EPA press release - December 1, 1995] This page (http://www.epa.gov/35thanniversary/topics/epa/25b.htm) is now offline.
(2) DDT Ban Takes Effect
[EPA press release - December 31, 1972]
(3) Carson, R. Silent Spring. 1962. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston..
(4) Carson, R. 1963. Rachel Carson Answers. Audubon Sept., 65:262-265.
(5) Frisch, B.H. 1964. Was Rachel Carson Right Sci. Dig. Aug., 56:39-45. United States Department of Agriculture. 1952. Insects: The Yearbook
of Agriculture. United States Government Printing Office. |