Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Neonicotinoid


A commonly used nerve-agent pesticide is the likely culprit in sharp worldwide declines in honey bee colonies in the last five years, a scientific study claimed yesterday.
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Imidacloprid, one of the neonicotinoid family of pesticides introduced over the past 15 years, is likely to be responsible for Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), the recently observed phenomenon in which bees abandon their hives en masse, according to the study by scientists from the Harvard School of Public Health in the United States.
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The study, which appeared in the June issue of The Bulletin of Insectology, provides "convincing evidence" of the link between imidacloprid and CCD, claim the authors, led by Alex Lu, associate professor of environmental exposure biology in the school's Department of Environmental Health. 
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It follows two other widely publicised studies, from Britain and France, published recently in the journal Science, which strongly suggested that neonicotinoids were linked to the declines in bees and other pollinating insects seen in Europe and the US.
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Neonicotinoids, which attack the central nervous system of insects, are considered by some scientists as dangerous to species which are not the compounds' principal targets, because they are "systemic"
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Meaning they do not just sit on the surface of a plant but are taken up into every part of it, including the pollen and nectar, where they can be ingested repeatedly by bees and other pollinating insects.
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Imidacloprid, manufactured by the German agrochemicals giant Bayer, was one of the first neonicotinoids to be introduced and has since been used on millions of acres of crops, especially in the US. 
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The compound was Bayer's top-selling insecticide in 2009, earning the company £510m.
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The Harvard researchers dosed bees with imidacloprid at levels "determined to reflect imidacloprid residues reported in the environment previously", they said. 
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They found that at the end of the research period, the hives had been abandoned.
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The Green MP, Caroline Lucas, said yesterday: "This research from Harvard, together with the two recently published studies from Britain and France, clearly exposing the risk to bee colonies from neonicotinoid insecticides, should be a deafening wake-up call for the Government."
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She has written to the Environment Secretary, Caroline Spelman, "to demand an immediate ban on both lethal and non lethal doses of neonicotinoids". 
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Unsurprisingly Bayer does not like to comment on this situation.
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Nor does anyone seem inclined to look at the timing of the introduction of these products and the disappearance of bees.
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For sure it is not the only cause but can well be the trigger making bees susceptible to other problems like mites etc.
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Wouldn't it be nice if governments for once had the balls to ban these products until it can be proven beyond any possible doubt that they are not the cause of this global problem.
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Too put the interests of humanity before big business.
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Not a chance, too many monied interests involved.
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Sorry little people.

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