Pesticide Resistance
Pesticide resistance is the heritable change in a pest, weed, or pathogen population that enables it to survive a chemical dose that previously killed it. The Insecticide Resistance Action Committee (IRAC) has catalogued over 600 arthropod species with documented resistance to at least one insecticide, and herbicide-resistant weeds now infest more than 70 million hectares worldwide, imposing estimated annual costs above $10 billion.
How Pesticide Resistance Works
Resistance evolves through Darwinian selection. A pest population contains rare individuals carrying resistance alleles at background frequencies of 10⁻⁶ to 10⁻⁴. When a pesticide kills susceptible individuals, resistant survivors reproduce disproportionately, and their descendants dominate the population within 5–15 generations. The speed of evolution depends on dose intensity, mode of action, selection pressure, and the pest's reproductive rate. Greenhouse whiteflies and spider mites, with short generation times and high fecundity, develop resistance fastest; slow-breeding beetles take longer. Fungicides show similar dynamics: single-site-of-action products like the strobilurins have been largely disabled against several pathogens within a decade of commercial release.
IRAC and the Fungicide Resistance Action Committee (FRAC) classify all active ingredients into mode-of-action (MoA) groups. Rotating products across MoA groups — not just different brand names — is the single most effective resistance-management tactic. If a farmer applies a Group 3 pyrethroid followed by another Group 3, resistance selection continues; switching to Group 5 (spinosyns) or Group 28 (diamides) breaks the selection pressure. USDA NRCS Integrated Pest Management guidelines and university extension programs maintain MoA rotation charts and economic threshold tables to support decision-making.
Four additional tactics reduce selection pressure. Economic thresholds — spraying only when pest density causes yield loss exceeding control cost — prevent routine preventive applications that accelerate resistance. Refuge areas — leaving patches of untreated or non-Bt crop — preserve susceptible individuals that dilute resistant gene frequencies in the mating pool. Biological controls and cultural practices (crop rotation, resistant varieties, sanitation) reduce reliance on any single tactic. Full-label rates matter: sublethal doses selectively breed moderately resistant individuals, whereas correct rates kill all but the truly resistant survivors, slowing frequency increase. WiseYield's pest and disease module tracks application history by MoA group and flags sprays that would compound selection pressure within a single season.
Sources
- Insecticide Resistance Action Committee (IRAC, 2023). Mode of Action Classification Scheme.
- Heap (2023). International Herbicide-Resistant Weed Database. weedscience.org.
- USDA NRCS (2022). Integrated pest management conservation practice standard.