As apples are not known to kill pests, no.
The pesticides kill bacteria that eats/rots the apple.
An apple could make you sick because it is rotten or has unwanted pesticide chemicles which cause a reaction in your body that make you feel sick.
pesticide
My Pesticide was created in 2007.
Local Pesticide
depends on the pesticide and the pest If the pest is on the plant the pesticide must contact the plant.
If you are worried about pesticide spray residues that might have sunk into apple skins then you can peel them just to be extra safe. Any pesticide residues will have stayed in the skin. Otherwise apples are not poisonous but a nutritious food eaten raw or cooked. Unless you are one of the few people allergic to them they are a great food to eat. There is an old saying, "An apple a day keeps the doctor away."
The plural of pesticide is pesticides.
The act of crop dusting itself has not led to pesticide resistance. Mismanagement of pesticide application is the root cause of pesticide resistance.
The ISBN of The Pesticide Question is 9780412035814.
The Pesticide Question was created in 1993.
Pesticide resistance describes the decreased susceptibility of a pest population to a pesticide that was previously effective at controlling the pest.