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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Thu Apr 26, 2012, 01:32 PM Apr 2012

Bugs pick up pesticide resistance from pesticide-eating bacteria

By John Timmer |

The indiscriminate spraying of pesticides has probably caused as many problems as it has solved, but here's one that was not expected: some bacteria have decided that one insecticide is a very tasty meal. Unfortunately for us, one of the strains of bacteria that has evolved the ability to digest the toxin happens to be able to find a home in an insect's gut. When it does so, it provides the insect with resistance.

Several factors had to come together for this to take place, but one was the heavy use of fenitrothion, which is described as "one of the most popular organophosphorus insecticides used worldwide" by the authors of a study of these insects. It has apparently been so widely deployed that a variety of bacteria have evolved the ability to use it as a food source. Most of these simply inhabit the soil in the fields where it is used and, at worst, cut down on the level of insecticide present and thereby make life a bit easier for the insects.

One of the bacterial species, Burkholderia has a rather unusual ability. Not only can the strain make a living in the soil, but it can also take up residence inside the gut of insects, acting as what's called a "endosymbiont." In most cases, insects transfer endosymbionts as contaminants on the egg, which take up residence in the offspring as they hatch—these bacteria never have to spend any time living outside an insect. Burkholderia, then, is rather unusual, in that the bugs seem to pick up an infection from the environment. It's still a symbiont, though, as animals that carry these bacteria tend to live longer and grow larger than their peers that don't have any in their guts.

The researchers describe a series of fairly straightforward experiments that make their case. When they took a pot of soil and treated it weekly with fenitrothion, they found that it actually boosted the bacterial population, and that 80 percent of the bacteria that grew out were able to digest the toxin. (Conveniently, an intermediate in the digestion process is yellow, while the original compound is completely colorless.) This confirmed that the pesticide could be a useful food source.

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http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2012/04/bugs-pick-up-pesticide-resistance-from-pesticide-eating-bacteria.ars

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Bugs pick up pesticide resistance from pesticide-eating bacteria (Original Post) n2doc Apr 2012 OP
Makes a heck of alot of sense considering they,, benld74 Apr 2012 #1
I hope some learn how to eat microplastics AlecBGreen Apr 2012 #2

benld74

(9,901 posts)
1. Makes a heck of alot of sense considering they,,
Thu Apr 26, 2012, 02:04 PM
Apr 2012

have been finding bateria eat everything from oil to toxic sludge depending upon their environment. Very adaptable thingees they are,,,,,

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