Biopesticides — UPSC Notes

Biopesticides — UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS
GS Paper III · Agriculture · Biotechnology · Environment

🌿 Biopesticides — Nature's Arsenal for Sustainable Farming

Definition · 3 Types (Microbial, Biochemical, PIPs) · Bt Toxin · Neem · NPV · Beauveria bassiana · Trichoderma · IPM · Chemical vs Bio · India Market 2024 · NMNF · PKVY · Challenges · PYQs & MCQs

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What are Biopesticides? — Nature's Own Pest Controllers
Definition · EPA Classification · Why We Need Them
📖 Definition (US EPA) Biopesticides are certain types of pesticides derived from natural materials — animals, plants, bacteria, fungi, viruses, and certain minerals — used to control agricultural pests, plant diseases, and weeds. They work through specific biological mechanisms rather than broad chemical toxicity, making them inherently less harmful to non-target organisms and the environment.
🌾 Simple Analogy — For Non-Biology Students Chemical pesticides are like carpet-bombing a city to kill criminals — they kill everything, including innocent civilians (beneficial insects, soil organisms, birds, and human health). Biopesticides are like trained police snipers — they target only specific criminals (specific pests) with precision, leaving everything else unharmed. They work with nature instead of against it.
☠ Chemical Pesticides
❌ Broad-spectrum — kills beneficial insects, soil microbes, pollinators
❌ Persist in soil and water for years (DDT persists 2–15 years)
❌ Bioaccumulate in food chains (biomagnification)
❌ Residues on food — health risks to consumers
❌ Pests develop resistance quickly
❌ Harm to farmers: skin absorption, inhalation
❌ Kill natural predators → secondary pest outbreaks
❌ Export rejection due to MRL (Maximum Residue Limit) violations
VS
✅ Biopesticides
✅ Narrow-spectrum — targets specific pests only
✅ Biodegradable — break down quickly in environment
✅ No bioaccumulation in food chains
✅ Minimal residues — safe for export (MRL compliant)
✅ Resistance development is slower
✅ Safe for farmers, consumers, and wildlife
✅ Preserve natural enemies and beneficial insects
✅ Compatible with IPM (Integrated Pest Management)
🇮🇳 India's Chemical Pesticide Problem — Why Biopesticides Are Urgent India uses ~0.6 kg pesticide per hectare — much lower than China (13 kg/ha) or USA (7 kg/ha), but quality and safety are serious concerns. Key problems:
  • India suffers ~200,000 pesticide poisoning cases per year and significant export rejections due to MRL violations
  • The pesticide market was ₹316 billion and growing — chronic overuse in cash crops
  • Groundwater contamination, loss of pollinator populations (bees), and farmer health crises are documented
  • The government has pivoted towards chemical-free farming — biopesticides are the central tool
Neem tree Azadirachta indica - source of azadirachtin biopesticide

Neem (Azadirachta indica) — India's most important botanical biopesticide source. Azadirachtin from neem seeds disrupts insect moulting hormones, feeding, and reproduction. Used for centuries in India; now used in over 100 countries as a registered biopesticide. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Ladybird beetle - natural biological control agent

Ladybird beetle (Coccinella septempunctata) — a classical biological control agent. One adult can eat 200+ aphids per day. Biopesticide-based farming preserves these natural predators which chemical pesticides destroy. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

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3 Types of Biopesticides — The Complete Classification High Yield
Microbial · Biochemical · Plant-Incorporated Protectants
🧠 Mnemonic — Remember All 3 Types "My Big Plants" — Microbial · Biochemical · Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs)
🦠
Type 1: Microbial Biopesticides
Bacteria · Fungi · Viruses · Nematodes · Protozoa
What: Biopesticides derived from microorganisms — bacteria, fungi, viruses, nematodes, or protozoa — that infect, kill, or inhibit specific pest species.
🦠 Bacterial
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) — produces Cry protein toxic to specific insects. Bt var. kurstaki: kills lepidopteran (moth) larvae. Bt var. israelensis: kills mosquito & blackfly larvae. Bt var. tenebrionis: kills beetle larvae. Used in Bt cotton, Bt brinjal (as a separate pesticide spray too).

Bacillus subtilis: controls fungal plant diseases (powdery mildew, damping-off)
🍄 Fungal
Beauveria bassiana: "White muscardine disease" — spores contact insect cuticle → germinate → penetrate body → kill in 5–10 days. Targets: whitefly, aphids, thrips, grasshoppers, beetles, bollworm, termites, malaria mosquitoes.

Metarhizium anisopliae: Similar to Beauveria — soil/foliar insects.

Trichoderma spp.: Controls plant fungal diseases (Fusarium wilt, damping-off). Stimulates plant defence (SAR). UPSC favourite
🦠 Viral & Others
NPV (Nucleopolyhedrovirus): Infects & kills caterpillar/lepidopteran pests. Highly specific — e.g., Helicoverpa NPV (HaNPV) for cotton bollworm. Takes 7–14 days to kill.

Granulosis Virus (GV): Kills moth/butterfly larvae.

Beneficial nematodes: Steinernema spp. — burrow into soil insects & release symbiotic bacteria that kill the pest from inside.
🍄 How Beauveria bassiana Kills an Insect
① Spores contact insect cuticle (no ingestion needed) ② Spores germinate penetrate cuticle enzymes dissolve cuticle ③ Fungus grows inside insect body absorbs nutrients + toxins ④ Insect dies in 5–10 days white mold visible ⑤ New spores released from cadaver → spread self-perpetuating control
🌿
Type 2: Biochemical Biopesticides
Plant Extracts · Semiochemicals · Growth Regulators · Minerals
What: Naturally occurring substances (NOT microorganisms) that control pests through non-toxic, behaviourally specific mechanisms — plant extracts, insect communication chemicals (semiochemicals), growth regulators, and minerals.
🌿 Plant Extracts (Botanical Biopesticides)
Azadirachtin (Neem) — from Azadirachta indica. Disrupts insect moulting hormones (ecdysone) → insects cannot moult → cannot reproduce → stop feeding. Broad-spectrum against 200+ insects but safe for mammals. India's most important botanical biopesticide.

Pyrethrin — from Chrysanthemum cinerariaefolium (pyrethrum flowers). Fast-acting nerve toxin for insects. Biodegrades rapidly in sunlight. Basis of synthetic pyrethroids (more persistent but less safe).

Rotenone — from Derris plant roots. Disrupts insect cellular respiration. Used against sucking pests.

Nicotine — from tobacco leaves. Nerve toxin. Also kills nematodes.
📡 Semiochemicals
Pheromones — chemical signals insects use to communicate. Sex pheromones: attract male insects to traps → disrupt mating (no offspring) → population crashes without any toxicity. Used in monitoring and mass trapping for cotton bollworm, fruit flies.

Kairomones — chemical signals from prey/host plants that attract natural predators.

Repellents — plant-derived chemicals that deter pest insects (e.g., citronella, eucalyptus oils)
🔬 Mineral-based
Diatomaceous Earth (DE) — fossilised algae. Microscopic sharp edges pierce insect exoskeleton → desiccation → death. Grain storage pest control. Non-toxic to mammals.

Kaolin clay — coats plant surfaces, making them unattractive to pests.
🌾
Type 3: Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs)
Transgenic Plants · Cry Proteins · Built-in Protection
What: Pesticidal substances that plants produce themselves after being genetically engineered with a foreign gene (transgene). The plant becomes its own pesticide factory. Most important example: Bt crops (Bt cotton, Bt brinjal, Bt corn).
How it works:
The cry gene from Bacillus thuringiensis is inserted into the plant genome → every cell of the plant produces Cry protein (insecticidal) → when pest eats the plant, Cry protein activated in its alkaline gut → binds to midgut receptors → pores form → insect dies in 48–72 hours.

Key examples:
Bt Cotton: cry1Ac + cry2Ab genes → bollworm resistance → India's ONLY approved GM crop
Bt Corn/Maize: approved globally — European corn borer
Bt Brinjal: cry1Ac — approved in Bangladesh, under moratorium in India
Regulatory status in India:
PIPs are regulated as GM crops (not just biopesticides) — they need GEAC (Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee) approval under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. Much stricter regulation than spray-on biopesticides.

Controversy: Despite being a "biopesticide" by nature (Bt protein is natural), PIPs are controversial because they involve genetic modification. The distinction between "natural biopesticide" and "GM crop" is a key UPSC conceptual question.
TypeSourceKey ExamplesTargetSpeed
Microbial — BacterialBacillus thuringiensisBt spray, Bt crops (PIPs)Lepidopteran larvae, mosquitoes, beetles2–5 days
Microbial — FungalBeauveria, Metarhizium, TrichodermaBotaniGard, Bioderma, Tricho-cardInsects, soil pathogens, fungal diseases5–14 days
Microbial — ViralNucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV), GranulovirusHaNPV (bollworm), SpNPV (spodoptera)Caterpillars, moth larvae7–14 days
Microbial — NematodesSteinernema, HeterorhabditisNemacur BioSoil insects (grubs, larvae)24–48 hrs
Biochemical — BotanicalNeem, Pyrethrum, Rotenone, NicotineNeemix, NeemAzal, Neem oilBroad insects (200+ spp. for neem)Hours–2 days
Biochemical — SemiochemicalInsect pheromones, plant volatilesHelilure (bollworm trap), fruit fly trapBehaviour modification — no killContinuous monitoring
PIPs (Transgenic)Cry genes from Bt bacteriaBt Cotton (India), Bt Corn (global)Specific insect larvae (built-in)48–72 hrs
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Role in Sustainable Farming — IPM, Natural Farming & Beyond
IPM · ZBNF · Soil Health · Biodiversity · Export Benefits
🌱 Why Biopesticides Are the Backbone of Sustainable Agriculture Sustainable agriculture requires producing enough food without depleting natural resources or poisoning ecosystems for future generations. Biopesticides achieve this by working with nature's own pest management mechanisms — microbial competition, predator-prey relationships, and plant chemical defences — rather than replacing them with synthetic toxins.
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IPM — Integrated Pest Management
Biopesticides are the centrepiece of IPM — a strategy combining biological control, cultural practices, and minimal chemical use. IPM reduces pesticide use by 50–80% while maintaining yields. India's National IPM Programme promotes Trichoderma, NPV, and neem-based products.
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Soil Health Preservation
Chemical pesticides kill soil microbiome — fungi, bacteria, earthworms that maintain fertility. Biopesticides (especially Trichoderma, Beauveria) are soil-compatible — they integrate into the soil ecosystem, promote plant growth, and improve soil structure rather than sterilising it.
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Pollinator Protection
Bees and other pollinators are essential for 35% of global food production. Most chemical pesticides are lethal to bees (especially neonicotinoids). Biopesticides like Bt and neem have minimal to no toxicity to bees and other beneficial insects — crucial for crop pollination.
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Export Market Access
EU, USA, and Japan have strict Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs) for pesticides. India loses billions in export rejections (grapes, tea, spices) due to chemical residues. Biopesticide-grown produce has minimal MRL issues — key to India's agricultural export growth target.
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Resistance Management
Pests rapidly develop resistance to chemical pesticides (pink bollworm to Bt cotton by 2015). Rotating biopesticides with different mechanisms of action (Beauveria + NPV + Bt spray) slows resistance development — maintaining long-term pest control effectiveness.
🧪
Organic Farming Enabler
Organic certification (India Organic, NPOP, EU Organic) prohibits synthetic pesticides. Biopesticides are permitted — they are indispensable for certified organic farming. India's organic food exports depend entirely on biopesticide-based pest management.
🌿 Jeevamrut & ZBNF — Natural Farming Link Zero Budget Natural Farming (ZBNF), promoted by Andhra Pradesh and now scaled nationally under the National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF), uses biopesticide-equivalent preparations:
  • Jeevamrut — fermented cow dung, urine, jaggery, gram flour, soil → rich in beneficial bacteria and fungi that suppress soil pathogens (similar to Trichoderma function)
  • Neemastra / Brahmastra — neem-based botanical extracts (leaf + bark + fruit) → pest repellent and fungicide (similar to commercial neem biopesticides)
  • Dashparni Ark — 10-leaf extract including neem, custard apple, lantana → multi-pest repellent
  • These are not registered biopesticides but serve the same ecological function in traditional farming contexts
🇮🇳
India's Biopesticide Story — Policy, Market & Current Affairs 2024–25
NMNF · PKVY · NMSA · BioRRAP · IISR · Market $260M
📊 India's Biopesticide Market — 2024–25 India's biopesticide market reached USD 260 million in 2025 (IMARC Group) and is projected to grow to USD 702 million by 2033 at a CAGR of 10.3%. The biofertilizer-biopesticide combined market reached $1.6 billion in 2024. Row crops (rice, wheat, maize) account for 88.6% of biopesticide use. Bioherbicides led with 30.7% market share in 2024, while bioinsecticides show the fastest growth.

🏛 Government Policies Promoting Biopesticides:

✅ Approved in November 2024
National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF):
Budget: ₹2,481 crore (Central: ₹1,584 cr + State: ₹897 cr)
Target: 1 crore farmers · 7.5 lakh hectares · 15,000 clusters
Establishes 10,000 Bio-input Resource Centres (BRCs) — community hubs producing and distributing biopesticides and biofertilizers locally
Standalone CSS under Ministry of Agriculture — very high UPSC probability
📋 Ongoing Schemes
PKVY (Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana): ₹50,000/hectare for 3 years to convert to organic farming — biopesticides subsidised

NMSA (National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture): Subsidies for IPM inputs including biopesticides

NPOP (National Programme for Organic Production): Certification scheme — biopesticide use mandatory for organic label

National IPM Programme (ICAR): Promotes Trichoderma, NPV, neem in rice, cotton, vegetables
DevelopmentYearSignificance
NMNF approved — National Mission on Natural FarmingNov 2024₹2,481 crore. 10,000 Bio-input Resource Centres. Mainstreams biopesticide use in 15,000 clusters.
IISR Trichoderma granule — Indian Institute of Spices ResearchNov 2024Lime-based granular Trichoderma biopesticide-fertilizer developed for soil health + disease control. Easy field application.
BioRRAP — Biopesticide Registration Rules streamlined2024Faster registration pathway for proven microbial strains — shortens time-to-market, encourages smaller manufacturers to enter the biopesticide market.
India Bioeconomy — $130 billion (2024)2024Biofertilizers/Biopesticides market = $1.6 billion component of India's $130B bioeconomy.
Arqivo launch — Tagros-backed startupJun 2025New biopesticide company launched in Uttarakhand with focus on sustainable farming nationwide — signals growing private sector interest.
Drone-enabled biopesticide spraying2024–25Precision drone application improves field efficacy of biopesticides (which are more sensitive to application timing than chemicals). Government subsidises agricultural drones.
🌾 Andhra Pradesh ZBNF Success Story — National Model Andhra Pradesh launched Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS) to implement ZBNF at scale — reaching over 700,000 farmers by 2023 across 6 million acres. Farmers using biopesticide-based ZBNF reported: 40–50% reduction in input costs, improved soil health, better groundwater quality, and equivalent or better yields after 2–3 transition years. The Prime Minister praised ZBNF at multiple platforms, leading to its nationalisation through NMNF in 2024. The AP model is a live UPSC current affairs example of how biopesticides enable sustainable, profitable farming at scale.
Challenges & Limitations — Why Adoption is Still Low
Slow Action · Shelf Life · Cost · Knowledge Gaps
Slow Speed of Action
Beauveria takes 5–10 days; NPV takes 7–14 days; Bt takes 2–5 days. Farmers accustomed to chemical pesticides that show results in hours resist switching. In acute infestations, the delay can mean significant crop loss before the biopesticide takes effect.
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Short Shelf Life & Storage
Microbial biopesticides contain living organisms — sensitive to temperature, humidity, UV light. Most require refrigeration (2–8°C) and have shelf life of 6–18 months. India's rural supply chain lacks cold chain infrastructure, leading to product failure in the field.
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Weather Sensitivity
Effectiveness depends heavily on conditions. Beauveria needs humidity >80% to germinate. NPV is destroyed by UV light — must be sprayed in the evening. Neem's azadirachtin degrades rapidly in heat and sunlight. India's diverse climates create variable performance, confusing farmers.
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Farmer Knowledge Gap
Biopesticides require precise timing (apply at early pest stage), correct dosage, proper mixing, and right application method. Most Indian farmers lack training in these nuances. Agricultural extension services are inadequate — only 1 extension worker per 1,000+ farmers in many districts.
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Higher Upfront Cost
Biopesticides often cost more per unit than chemical alternatives. Quality control and fermentation/production infrastructure add to cost. Small farmers with limited capital cannot absorb initial higher spending, even if long-term savings are greater. Needs subsidy support.
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Regulatory Complexity
Registration of new biopesticide products is slow. India historically lacked a clear, fast-track regulatory pathway. The new BioRRAP (2024) streamlines this, but implementation is ongoing. Lack of standardised quality testing leads to substandard products flooding the market.
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PYQs & Practice MCQs
UPSC Prelims & Mains Pattern · Direct Hit Topics
📜 UPSC Prelims 2012 — GS Paper I Classic PYQ — Biocontrol PYQ 2012
Q. With reference to the role of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) in environment, which of the following statements is/are correct?
  1. It is used as a biopesticide in crop fields.
  2. It is used as a biopesticide for disease control in silk worms and honey bees.
  3. It can be used to check the growth of Plasmodium vivax.
  • a) 1 only ✓
  • b) 2 and 3 only
  • c) 1 and 3 only
  • d) 1, 2 and 3
✅ Answer: (a) 1 only
Statement 1 CORRECT: Bt is extensively used as a spray-on biopesticide in crop fields (rice, cotton, vegetables) — Bt var. kurstaki for caterpillars, Bt var. israelensis for mosquito larvae.

Statement 2 WRONG: Bt is NOT used to control silk worm or honey bee diseases — in fact, Bt var. kurstaki can be harmful to silkworms (which are also lepidopteran larvae!). Silkworm diseases are caused by viruses (NPV) and microsporidians, not bacteria that Bt targets.

Statement 3 WRONG: Bt does NOT check Plasmodium vivax (which causes malaria in humans). Plasmodium is a protozoan that lives inside red blood cells — completely different from insect larvae. Bt var. israelensis kills mosquito larvae (before they become adult vectors) but does NOT affect the malaria parasite inside humans. This is a classic UPSC misdirection.
📜 UPSC Prelims 2014 — GS Paper I PYQ 2014
Q. With reference to 'Integrated Pest Management' (IPM), consider the following statements:
  1. IPM strictly prohibits the use of any pesticides, including biopesticides.
  2. In IPM, chemical pesticides are used only as a last resort when other control methods have failed.
  3. Biopesticides and biological control agents are preferred in IPM over chemical pesticides.
  • a) 1 and 2 only
  • b) 2 and 3 only ✓
  • c) 1 and 3 only
  • d) 1, 2 and 3
✅ Answer: (b)
Statement 1 WRONG: IPM does NOT prohibit biopesticides — in fact, biopesticides are central to IPM. IPM is about using a combination of methods: cultural, biological, mechanical, and chemical — with preference given to least-toxic options (biopesticides first, chemicals last). Prohibiting pesticides entirely would be unrealistic for commercial agriculture.

Statements 2 and 3 CORRECT: IPM uses a decision-making process: (1) Monitor pest levels, (2) Identify economic threshold, (3) Use biological/cultural controls first (including biopesticides), (4) Use chemical pesticides ONLY when pest populations exceed the economic threshold and other methods have failed. This approach reduces chemical pesticide use by 40–70% while maintaining yields.
📜 UPSC Mains 2019 — GS Paper III (15 marks) Mains 2019
Q. How can biotechnology help to improve the living standards of farmers? (15 marks)

Biopesticide Angle for This Question:
  • Cost reduction: Biopesticides reduce farmer's pesticide spending by 30–50%. IPM with biopesticides cuts total input costs significantly.
  • Health safety: Chemical pesticides cause ~200,000 poisoning cases in India annually. Switching to biopesticides dramatically reduces farmer occupational health risks.
  • Premium prices: Organic/biopesticide-grown produce commands 20–50% premium in domestic and export markets — directly increasing farmer income.
  • Export market access: EU, USA MRL compliance — India loses billions in export rejections. Biopesticide farming enables export of spices, grapes, tea — boosting farmer income.
  • Specific examples: Bt cotton → reduced bollworm losses → higher yield. Trichoderma → soil health → sustainable productivity. Neem-based IPM → 40–42% pesticide reduction in vegetables.
  • Policy support: NMNF (₹2,481 cr, Nov 2024) · PKVY · 10,000 BRCs → institutional support for biopesticide adoption
🧪 Practice MCQs — Biopesticides (Click to attempt)
Q1. Which of the following is the correct classification of Biopesticides according to the US EPA?
1. Microbial pesticides — derived from microorganisms
2. Biochemical pesticides — naturally occurring substances controlling pests by non-toxic mechanisms
3. Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs) — pesticidal substances produced by genetically modified plants
  1. (a) 1 only
  2. (b) 1 and 2 only
  3. (c) 2 and 3 only
  4. (d) 1, 2 and 3
All three are correct — the US EPA classifies biopesticides into exactly these three categories. (1) Microbial: derived from microorganisms — bacteria (Bt), fungi (Beauveria, Trichoderma), viruses (NPV), nematodes, protozoa. (2) Biochemical: naturally occurring substances — plant extracts (neem-azadirachtin, pyrethrin), semiochemicals (pheromones), growth regulators, minerals (diatomaceous earth). (3) PIPs: pesticidal substances plants produce when genetically engineered — Bt cotton and Bt corn produce Cry proteins (originally from bacteria) in every cell. This three-part classification is a standard UPSC question on types of biopesticides.
Q2. Which of the following statements about azadirachtin from neem is/are correct?
1. It disrupts insect moulting hormones (ecdysone), preventing insects from moulting and reproducing.
2. It is effective against more than 200 insect species.
3. It is highly toxic to mammals and birds and must be used with protective equipment.
  1. (a) 1 and 2 only
  2. (b) 1 and 2 only
  3. (c) 2 and 3 only
  4. (d) 1, 2 and 3
Statements 1 and 2 are correct; Statement 3 is WRONG. Azadirachtin from neem works by interfering with insect ecdysone (moulting hormone) → insects cannot moult → stuck in larval stage → stop feeding → cannot reproduce. Extremely broad-spectrum: effective against 200+ insect species including aphids, whitefly, thrips, caterpillars, beetles, and more. However, Statement 3 is factually incorrect — azadirachtin is specifically SAFE for mammals, birds, fish, and beneficial insects like bees (at field application rates). This safety is precisely why neem is considered a model biopesticide. It is one of the few biopesticides approved for organic farming globally (US NOP, EU Organic). No protective equipment requirement beyond standard agricultural practice.
Q3. Beauveria bassiana is classified as which type of biopesticide, and what is its unique mode of action?
  1. (a) Biochemical biopesticide — it produces azadirachtin that disrupts insect moulting
  2. (b) Viral biopesticide — it infects insects with a virus that causes osmotic cell lysis
  3. (c) Microbial (fungal) biopesticide — its spores attach to insect cuticle, germinate, penetrate the body, grow inside the insect consuming nutrients, produce toxins, and kill the insect in 5–10 days
  4. (d) Plant-Incorporated Protectant — it is produced by genetically modified plants to repel insects
Beauveria bassiana is a microbial (entomopathogenic fungal) biopesticide. Its mechanism is unique — unlike chemical pesticides or Bt (which need to be ingested), Beauveria spores act through direct contact with insect cuticle. Spores → germinate → produce cuticle-dissolving enzymes → penetrate insect body → grow inside → absorb nutrients and produce toxins → insect dies in 5–10 days → white mold appears on cadaver → new spores released. This allows secondary spread in the pest population — one application provides ongoing biological control. It targets: whitefly, aphids, thrips, bollworm, termites, grasshoppers, and even malaria mosquitoes. Trichoderma (another fungal biopesticide) works differently — it colonises the root zone and attacks plant-pathogenic fungi through competition and mycoparasitism, not insect pests.
Q4. The National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF), approved by the Union Cabinet in November 2024, established "Bio-input Resource Centres (BRCs)". What is the primary purpose of these BRCs?
  1. (a) To provide financial loans to organic farmers for land consolidation
  2. (b) To serve as community-level hubs producing and distributing locally made biopesticides, biofertilizers, and other natural farming inputs to nearby farmers
  3. (c) To regulate and certify the quality of commercially manufactured biopesticides in India
  4. (d) To train agricultural scientists in advanced genome editing techniques for crop improvement
Bio-input Resource Centres (BRCs) under NMNF (₹2,481 crore, Nov 2024) are designed as community-level production and distribution hubs for natural farming inputs. At each BRC, local preparations like Jeevamrut, Beejamrut, Ghan Jeevamrut, and other biopesticide-equivalent products are made from locally available materials (cow dung, urine, plant extracts). These are then distributed to farmers in surrounding clusters. The 10,000 BRC target is central to the mission's goal of reaching 1 crore farmers across 15,000 clusters on 7.5 lakh hectares by covering 15 states. This decentralised model addresses a key challenge: the rural supply chain and cold-chain limitations that make commercial biopesticides difficult to access in remote areas.
Q5. NPV (Nucleopolyhedrovirus) biopesticide is most appropriately described as:
  1. (a) A fungal biopesticide that penetrates insect cuticle and kills from inside
  2. (b) A biochemical biopesticide derived from plant extracts that repels insects
  3. (c) A viral microbial biopesticide that infects and kills specific lepidopteran larvae (caterpillars) after ingestion, with high host specificity and no effect on other organisms
  4. (d) A Plant-Incorporated Protectant that produces viral proteins in transgenic plants
NPV (Nucleopolyhedrovirus) is classified as a viral microbial biopesticide. Key features: (1) Infection route: the virus must be ingested by the target insect — caterpillars eat NPV-contaminated plant material → virus dissolves in alkaline larval gut → enters cells → replicates → larvae liquefy and die within 7–14 days; (2) Extreme host specificity — HaNPV kills only Helicoverpa armigera (cotton bollworm); SpNPV kills only Spodoptera spp. (fall armyworm etc.); safe for ALL other organisms; (3) Application: sprayed on foliage at dusk (UV degrades virus particles — so must be sprayed in evening or with UV protectants); (4) Key use in India: HaNPV for cotton, vegetables; SpNPV for fall armyworm in maize (a major emerging threat). The slow action (7–14 days) is a limitation but the safety profile and ability to spread within pest populations are major advantages.
⚡ Quick Revision — Biopesticides Summary
TopicKey Facts to Remember
DefinitionDerived from natural materials (animals, plants, bacteria, fungi, viruses, minerals). Less toxic, narrow-spectrum, biodegradable. EPA: 3 types — Microbial, Biochemical, PIPs.
Microbial — BtBacillus thuringiensis. Produces Cry proteins. Activated in alkaline insect gut (NOT in acidic mammalian stomach). Kills lepidopteran larvae, mosquito larvae. Used as spray AND as Bt crops (PIPs).
Microbial — BeauveriaFungal. Spores contact insect → penetrate cuticle → kill in 5–10 days → white mold on cadaver. Targets: whitefly, aphids, bollworm, termites, mosquitoes. Contact action (no ingestion needed).
Microbial — TrichodermaFungal. Controls plant fungal diseases (Fusarium wilt, damping-off). Stimulates Systemic Acquired Resistance (SAR) in plants. Soil health promoter. IISR developed granular form (Nov 2024).
Microbial — NPVViral. Must be ingested. Kills lepidopteran caterpillars in 7–14 days. Highly host-specific. HaNPV (Helicoverpa), SpNPV (Spodoptera). Spray at dusk (UV-sensitive). Spreads in pest population naturally.
Biochemical — NeemAzadirachtin from Azadirachta indica. Disrupts ecdysone (moulting hormone). Effective vs 200+ insects. Safe for mammals, bees. Registered biopesticide globally. Botanical/biochemical type.
Biochemical — PheromonesInsect communication chemicals. Sex pheromones attract males to traps → disrupt mating → no offspring. Non-toxic. Used for monitoring + mass trapping of bollworm, fruit flies.
PIPsPlants genetically engineered to produce their own biopesticide (Cry protein). Bt cotton = India's only approved PIP. Regulated as GM crops under GEAC, not just as biopesticides.
India Market 2024–25$260M (2025) → $702M by 2033 at 10.3% CAGR. Biofertilizer+biopesticide combined = $1.6B (2024). Part of India's $130B bioeconomy.
NMNF Nov 2024₹2,481 crore. 1 crore farmers · 7.5 lakh ha · 15,000 clusters · 10,000 Bio-input Resource Centres. Standalone CSS under MoAFW. Mainstreams biopesticides nationally.
Sustainable Farming RoleIPM cornerstone · Soil health · Pollinator safety · MRL compliance for exports · Organic farming enabler · Resistance management · Groundwater protection
ChallengesSlow action (days vs hours) · Short shelf life · Cold chain requirement · Weather sensitivity · Farmer knowledge gap · Higher upfront cost · Regulatory complexity (improving with BioRRAP)
🚨 5 UPSC Traps — Biopesticides:

Trap 1 — "Bt spray = Bt crop (PIP)" → WRONG! Bt spray (applying Bacillus thuringiensis spores as a spray-on microbial biopesticide) is completely different from Bt crop (PIP) (a genetically modified plant that produces Cry protein in every cell). Bt spray = biochemical biopesticide, no GM involved, fast-degrading. Bt crop = requires GEAC approval as a GM crop under EPA 1986. The Cry protein is the same molecule — but the delivery mechanism and regulatory framework are entirely different.

Trap 2 — "Bt kills all insects including beneficial ones" → WRONG! Bt is highly specific — each Bt variety targets only specific insect groups. Bt var. kurstaki: only lepidopteran larvae (moths, butterflies). Bt var. israelensis: only dipteran larvae (mosquitoes, blackflies). The Cry protein requires BOTH specific receptor proteins in the gut AND alkaline gut pH to be activated — mammals, birds, bees, and beneficial insects lack these receptors and have acidic guts → completely safe.

Trap 3 — "Beauveria bassiana is a bacterial biopesticide" → WRONG! Beauveria bassiana is an entomopathogenic FUNGUS — not a bacterium. This is a common confusion in exam answers. The key distinction: fungal biopesticides (Beauveria, Metarhizium, Trichoderma) act through contact (spore germination + cuticle penetration). Bacterial biopesticides (Bt, Bacillus subtilis) act through ingestion (toxin produced + activated in gut).

Trap 4 — "Biopesticides have no limitations and should completely replace chemical pesticides" → WRONG! Biopesticides have real limitations: slow action, short shelf life, weather sensitivity, and higher cost. IPM (Integrated Pest Management) does not eliminate chemicals — it uses them as a last resort when biopesticides alone are insufficient. Complete replacement of chemicals is aspirational (natural farming) but not universally practical for all crops in all situations. UPSC Mains expects a balanced view.

Trap 5 — "NMNF is a sub-scheme of PKVY" → WRONG! The National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF) approved in November 2024 is a standalone Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) under the Ministry of Agriculture — it is independent of PKVY (Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana). Earlier, natural farming was part of BPKP (a sub-scheme of PKVY). NMNF's standalone status signals its elevation to a national priority programme.

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