Connect with us

Canada News

Scientists say no more room for doubt about impact of pesticides on birds, bees

Published

on

FILE: Neonicotinoids, also known as neonics, are nicotine-based pesticides commonly used by farmers to help keep everything from field crops to fruit orchards free of pests like aphids, spider mites, slugs and stink bugs.. (Photo:Peter Organisciak/ Flcikr)

FILE: Neonicotinoids, also known as neonics, are nicotine-based pesticides commonly used by farmers to help keep everything from field crops to fruit orchards free of pests like aphids, spider mites, slugs and stink bugs.. (Photo: Peter Organisciak/ Flcikr)

OTTAWA— A group of international scientists meets today to try to convince parliamentarians there is no longer any doubt that common agricultural pesticides are toxic chemicals which are killing off honey bees.

In fact, says Jean-Marc Bonmatin of the French National Centre for Scientific Research, neonicotinoid pesticides kill a lot more than just bees, posing a deadly risk to frogs, commn birds, fish and earthworms.

The scientists represent a task force on pesticides within the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which in 2015 released a comprehensive review of more than 1,100 peer-reviewed research studies on neonicotinoids.

Today they will release an update to the report.

Neonicotinoids, also known as neonics, are nicotine-based pesticides commonly used by farmers to help keep everything from field crops to fruit orchards free of pests like aphids, spider mites, slugs and stink bugs.

After beekeepers started sounding alarm bells about mass deaths of honeybees, scientists began to zero in on neonics as one of the culprits. Bees were consuming pollen contaminated with neonics as well as flying through chemical-laden clouds of dust from farm fields.

But bees, said Bonmatin were only the most “visible part of the problem” because beekeeping is a big business and without bees, billions of dollars of farm crops would go unpollinated.

“Beyond honey bees, there are all the wild bees, all these pollinators and behind all these pollinators there are some other invertebrates, the ones living in the soil, flying invertebrates, the ones in the water,” said Bonmatin.

“Nobody cares about that. There is no money in these invertebrates. However they are giving a huge service to the quality of soil, to all the ecosystem services that we need.”

Research suggest neonics can affect reproduction, growth and movement for these species, as well as make them more susceptible to disease.

Bonmatin, vice-chair of the task force, said evidence from Europe suggests these chemicals don’t actually help farmers much. Since Europe clamped down on their use four years ago, there hasn’t been a substantial reduction in farm yields.

Lisa Gue, a senior researcher with the David Suzuki Foundation which is involved in the release of the updated report, said Canada has to catch up to Europe and ban the use of all neonics.

Since 2013 the European Union hasn’t allowed the use of the three most common neonics in any crops which attract bees and is looking at extending that to additional crops. France is phasing in a complete ban on all agricultural uses of neonics, with the full ban set to take effect next year.

A year after Ontario’s bee industry recorded the loss of 58 per cent of its honeybees in the winter of 2013-14, Ontario began phasing in limits on use of neonics but only for corn and soybeans. Quebec proposed similar regulations earlier this year. Vancouver and Montreal have both banned their use entirely within city limits.

Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency has been studying neonics since 2012 and last fall came to a preliminary conclusion that one of them _ imidacloprid should be banned from use almost entirely after finding it was building up to toxic levels in surface and groundwater and killing aquatic insects that are a source of food for fish and birds.

Health Canada isn’t expected to make a final decision until at least December 2018. It is looking at the other two most commonly used neonics and is expected to release initial findings in December 2018 and final decisions in June 2019.

Gue said even if Health Canada decides next year to ban imidacloprid that phase-in isn’t scheduled to even start until 2021.

“I do have hope policy-makers and regulators in Canada will see the report as a wake-up call,” she said.

 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest

Man in White Dress Shirt Standing Beside Woman in Pink Long Sleeve Shirt Man in White Dress Shirt Standing Beside Woman in Pink Long Sleeve Shirt
Instagram1 day ago

What kind of diner are you? 6 types of diners who avoid plant-based meat dishes

Imagine having dinner at a restaurant. The menu offers plant-based meat alternatives made mostly from vegetables, mushrooms, legumes and wheat...

Art and Culture1 day ago

Coast Salish Canoe Culture comes to the Vancouver Maritime Museum

The Vancouver Maritime Museum is delighted to announce their latest exhibition from local səlil ̕wətaʔɬ and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh artist, Zoe George....

Education1 day ago

TD and ApplyBoard Collaborate to Support Filipino Students Pursuing Studies in Canada

New relationship to help students planning on studying in Canada prepare their finances and expedite their study permits TD and...

Community News1 day ago

Filipino Community Leaders Celebrate the Federal Funding Commitment for a Filipino Community Cultural Centre in BC

Vancouver, BC — Filipino community leaders and New Democrat Finance Critic MP Don Davies celebrated together the historic inclusion of...

Community News1 day ago

Emaciated dachshund found trapped in carrier down embankment getting the care he desperately needs

The starved dachshund was found by a Good Samaritan who was driving his truck to get to mountain bike trails...

Entertainment1 day ago

“Summer For Reel” brings JoshLia’s “Love You to the Stars and Back” in Boracay

With acoustic performances from Maki, Angela Ken, and Bugoy Drillon Beat the heat with this summer’s must-see outdoor screening event,...

Entertainment1 day ago

Star Cinema and The IdeaFirst Company announce Vice Ganda’s movie comeback in “And The Breadwinner Is”

Asia’s Unkabogable Phenomenal Superstar Vice Ganda is set to return to the big screen once again after a two-year hiatus,...

Entertainment1 day ago

Joshua and Julia reunite for new movie “Un/happy for you”

Directed by Petersen Vargas, slated for release this 2024 It is the reunion that is not on anybody’s bingo cards...

Canada News1 day ago

U.S. gov’t paying to upgrade section of Alaska Highway in the Yukon

By Gabrielle Plonka, CBC News $42.6M has been pledged for the project The Alaskan government has pledged $42.6 million for...

A medical worker examines an X-ray of a patient’s lungs. A medical worker examines an X-ray of a patient’s lungs.
Canada News1 day ago

Inuit leaders disappointed with budget’s lack of money for tuberculosis elimination

By Brett Forester · CBC News Budget pledges $1.1B for First Nations and Inuit health but offers nothing on TB elimination specifically...

WordPress Ads