Researchers Looking At Biological Pest Controls Under present Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rulings, farm use of DDT was banned as of December 31-. 1972. Other organochloine in secticides are also coming under close EPA scrutiny. In this group are aldrin and toxaphene, which along with DDT constituted the “big three” in farm insecticide use when the last study was made in 1966. As a skeptical eye is cast on insecticides which the farmer has long taken for granted, the need to provide safe, economic sub stitutes is growing. The long residual life associated with organochlorines - the chief insecticides in 1966 - has resulted in a build-up of these materials in the enviomment. The organophosphates and carbamates developed more recently degrade rather quickly and do not pose a long-term residue problem. However, many are toxic to humans and other warm-blooded animals and have caused some poisonings of those directly in contact with them. Waiting in the wings - or, rather, in the test tubes of pesticide researchers - is a series of experimental and innovative approaches to insect control. They range trom conventional to far-out, and they have a common goal: managing insect pest populations without harming or damaging the environment. Few of these are in widespread use yet, but they are promising alternatives to the increasing numbers of insecticides being banned or restricted. Following the lead of drug researchers, insecticide research and development is now ex perimenting with biodynamics. This method relates pesticides to the physiological processes of insects, piecing together a clear picture of how and why they work. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 31,1973 The researcher can then design pesticides to do specific tasks, using the insect’s own chemistry as the basis for control ‘and delivering the pesticide directly to the insect part where it can function most effectively. Researchers say this method may well score its first triumph in the development of agents that interfere with a pest's metabolism. They may, for example, reduce an insect’s impluse to feed, causing star vation. Agents may also be used to advance ot delay pupation, making the pupae more vulnerable to predators and disease organisms Disruption of an insect’s hormone balance is also being explored. Insects require two hormones - the so-called juvenile hormone and ecdyson - to pass from the larval stage to full maturity as a butterfly, fly, or beetle. Application of the hor mones at the right time could produce premature pupation or prevent metamorphosis. Both hormones have been synthesized, but the ecdyson structure is complicated and may never be commerically producible. More conventional research is focusing on the microbial and viral pathogen approach. Availability of materials to work with is the limiting actor in using pathogens in control programs There are also problems of registration of labels and quality The success of insect sterilization in controlling the screwworm is prompting use of this approach on other insects, including the pink cotton bollworm in, Nevada and the coddling moth in Washington. Meanwhile, the USDA has been looking into the possibility that farmers may be using more ONCE ACROSS THE FIELD DOES IT Smoketown, Po. I*l t ORTHO CHEVRON DESIGN UW«I RCC US PAf OFf insecticides than they need to. A nationwide pest management program has been developed for integrating all known methods of pest control. Initially, the focus has been on using pesticides only when estimated damage from pest populations exceeds the cost of control. Fewer, and more effective, applications are being stressed for crops like cotton, sweet peppers, Irish potatoes, alfalfa, sweet corn, apples, lettuce, and tobacco. As research develops safer, less toxic products and as ex perimental methods come into wider use the impact of restricted insecticide use on the farmer will be lessened Senior Citizens Tour Washington More than 80 ‘senior citi zens’ have seen their federal government in action through the new Senior In tern Program initiated by Sen. Lowell Weicker, Jr. (R.-Conn.). The program included dis cussions with members of the House and Senate, briefings on department and committee activities, seminars with White House, Justice and Congressional officials and di rect observation of the Con gress from the House and Senate galleries. The week’s visit was un derwritten by the Xerox Cor poration, General Telephone and Electronics, the South ern New England Telephone Company, the United Auto Workers-Region 9-A, the Ripps Realty, Inc., and the Greater Hartford Chamber of Commerce. PH. 397-3539 17