Did Your Shopping List Kill a Songbird?
Though a consumer may not be able to tell the difference, a striking red and blue Thomas the Tank Engine made in Wisconsin is not the same as one manufactured in China - the paint on the Chinese twin may contain dangerous levels of lead. In the same way, a plump red tomato from Florida is often not the same as one grown in Mexico. The imported fruits and vegetables found in our shopping carts in winter and early spring are grown with types and amounts of pesticides that would often be illegal in the United States.
In this case, the victims are North American songbirds. Bobolinks, called skunk blackbirds in some places, were once a common sight in the Eastern United States. In mating season, the male in his handsome tuxedo-like suit sings deliriously as he whirrs madly over the hayfields. Bobolink numbers have plummeted almost 50 percent in the last four decades, according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey.
The birds are being poisoned on their wintering grounds by highly toxic pesticides. Rosalind Renfrew, a biologist at the Vermont Center for Ecostudies, captured bobolinks feeding in rice fields in Bolivia and took samples of their blood to test for pesticide exposure. She found that about half of the birds had drastically reduced levels of cholinesterase, an enzyme that affects brain and nerve cells - a sign of exposure to toxic chemicals.
Since the 1980s, pesticide use has increased fivefold in Latin America as countries have expanded their production of nontraditional crops to fuel the demand for fresh produce during winter in North America and Europe. Rice farmers in the region use monocrotophos, methamidophos and carbofuran, all agricultural chemicals that are rated Class I toxins by the World Health Organization, are highly toxic to birds, and are either restricted or banned in the United States. In countries like Guatemala, Honduras and Ecuador, researchers have found that farmers spray their crops heavily and repeatedly with a chemical cocktail of dangerous pesticides.
In the mid-1990s, American biologists used satellite tracking to follow Swainson's hawks to their wintering grounds in Argentina, where thousands of them were found dead from monocrotophos poisoning.
Migratory songbirds like bobolinks, barn swallows and Eastern kingbirds are suffering mysterious population declines, and pesticides may well be to blame. A single application of a highly toxic pesticide to a field can kill seven to 25 songbirds per acre. About half the birds that researchers capture after such spraying are found to suffer from severely depressed neurological function.
Migratory birds, modern-day canaries in the coal mine, reveal an environmental problem hidden to consumers.
Testing by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration shows that fruits and vegetables imported from Latin America are three times as likely to violate Environmental Protection Agency standards for pesticide residues as the same foods grown in the United States. Some but not all pesticide residues can be removed by washing or peeling produce, but tests by the Centers for Disease Control show that most Americans carry traces of pesticides in their blood. American consumers can discourage this poisoning by avoiding foods that are bad for the environment, bad for farmers in Latin America and, in the worst cases, bad for their own families.
What should you put on your bird-friendly grocery list? Organic coffee, for one thing. Most mass-produced coffee is grown in open fields heavily treated with fertilizers, herbicides, fungicides and insecticides. In contrast, traditional small coffee farmers grow their beans under a canopy of tropical trees, which provide shade and essential nitrogen, and fertilize their soil naturally with leaf litter. Their organic, fair-trade coffee is now available in many coffee shops and supermarkets, and it is recommended by the Audubon Society, the American Bird Conservancy and the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center.
Organic bananas should also be on your list. Bananas are typically grown with one of the highest pesticide loads of any tropical crop.
Although bananas present little risk of pesticide ingestion to the consumer, the environment where they are grown is heavily contaminated.
When it comes to nontraditional Latin American crops like melons, green beans, tomatoes, bell peppers and strawberries, it can be difficult to find any that are organically grown. We should buy these foods only if they are not imported from Latin America.
Now that spring is here, we take it for granted that the birds' cheerful songs will fill the air when our apple trees blossom.
But each year, as we continue to demand out-of-season fruits and vegetables, we ensure that fewer and fewer songbirds will return.
Bridget Stutchbury, a professor of biology at York University in Toronto, is the author of "Silence of the Songbirds."
Copyright © 2008 The International Herald Tribune
Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
29 Comments so far
Show Alljclientelle
I think once you have an idea then you start to see many possibilities around you. For instance there is an open field near by that has been vacant (not really vacant it is full of wild native plants) but fallow. As I see more homeless people in the area now I've thought what a good idea it would be to make it a community garden space. There is enough land to feed a lot of people. It would mean competition to the area stores that change a high price for organic fruits and vegetables. It would save other community resources and help maintain a healthy community. I like ideas like this. Organic methods take time but the knowledge you gain and the participation with nature is well worth our efforts. I've started working in some of my neighbors yards and I enjoy getting to know them and thier plants. We trade stories and traditional methods and we all learn from it.. You are lucky to have a good representative...:)
jclienelle
Maybe I should have been more clear in what I meant by the example of the fox. The fox holds a place in natural healing, often times they are injured in traps and when this happens they find a particular type of earth mud that promotes healing. The earth has other protective elements for foxes but this has been known and used by other species as well. It is a different type of thinking not romance.
I eat songbirds, so, yes and no.
Treefrog - I would love to visit your yard. Most of us live in cities and alas cannot grow much food, but the concepts you discuss apply to us. One is organic and one is local.
I think we urban dwellers can educate our friends and neighbors that it is better to see the occasional worm or insect in our produce than to have the invisible and far more harmful pesticides on the food and in the land and water. Normal color, normal size fruits and vegetables grown locally are better for you and / or the environment.
Nydia Velazquez, my congressperson, has been trying to set up a situation where local farmers can market produce in poor neighborhoods in Brooklyn. Support small local farms and legislation that will give them small grants to institute organic and humane practices, which are more expensive at least in the beginning. Eating locally also saves on transportation fuel and carbon emissions.
Aside: One day I brought some strawberries to eat at work. My Russian co-worker looked at the size of the berries and asked if I got them from Chernyobl.
To change the subject a little bit: For any hosta lover's out there, I just heard about hosta virus x and realized I have it in my garden. It does not kill the plants, but is quite easily spread. I now realize I intentionally bought the disease because I liked the way it looked on a Paul's Glory hosta. However it often makes plants look less atractive. In a way it's nice to worry about things like this that are so relatively unimportant.
NAMASTE/TREE FROG: Inspired posts.
Namaste
We are all related, our heart beats with the rhythm of the earth. Our cycles are guided by the sun and moon and it is how we find ourselves when we are lost. The earth knows you by your touch and it is visible in the exchange, I think of that as a good thing. A dream place to see what will be and what has been lost. When a fox has been injured it knows where to go to heal its self.
For years we were visited by large wintering flocks of Audubon's Warblers. Last year one bird appeared and this year, two. Last week the first Black Chinned Hummingbird returned from Mexico, so far only one more BC has joined him. Only 1 Hooded Oriole of the 13 we had last year has returned. The vacuum created by our missing native migrants is being filled with exotic escapees - finches, parrots and Bulbuls.
Also, besides pesticides, consider the effect of tall, glass-skinned buildings and the disappearance of food and water sources to development on bird mortality.
Treefrog -- It is a grand panorama of alternatingly thrilling and thralling, and I too am seeking that unperturbed inner sanctum of still . . .
What has gone for my normal "good nature" has hardly well fit upon such joyous frogginess that you allow, although I've scrambled out of the path of soul-bending anger progressively 'being the empty hole in that flute that Christ's breath blows through, hear the blessed music' (14th century Sufi mystic).
I must laugh out loud at times, realizing how absurd it is to consider the profoundness of how can one have "self-destructiveness" -- Could it ever hold true when source is eternal along with the illusion of death -- how could infinity squared ever become ZERO ?
Could ZERO just be that stillness, whereupon infinity turns back and re-enters our existence?
Namaste
Namaste
Everything we put into the environment goes somewhere and it accumulates. I live in an agricultural area where we have pesticides in the water. I have been crop dusted while driving...man I get so mad....I lose my froggy good nature...
:)
Sioux
Here is an site that has some good ideas for Flordia...the land of flowers:
http://www.floridanativeplants.com/articles/refuge.shtml
The animals seem to know where it's safe. They don't get sick eating at my place. Toxins were never used. There is a vibrant community of animals here day and night. True, it helps that I feed the animals through the Winter and have plants and trees that feed them through the summer and fall. They recognize our family as members of the animal nation and accept us just as we do them. We share the gardens bounty with them. The deer. groundhog, rabbits, birds, raccoon, oppossum, all seem comfortable together. The deer and raccoon bring their young up to show them off to us. It's just awfully nice sitting out under a big walnut tree reading a book with all of this harmonious life around me. It's beyond my understanding why anyone would want to live otherwise by harming plant and animal life with pesticides. People have forgotten how to live.
Gainesville, Florida has a fabulous huge botanical garden (Kanapaha) and this past weekend they held their annual plant sale. Local people with green thumbs had some quite exotic plants for sale. My companion has always been great with plants (something I am going to try to learn now), and he mentioned that roses today seldom carry any scent. I was elated to find several for sale that had not had the delectable spray of petals bred out of them.
I remember reading on CD a few years ago a story about the lack of song birds in London. In their case it was due to the NOISE of traffic, a barrier that made it impossible for our winged friends to hear those all important love songs that summon the courship necessary for the continuation of their airborn species.
Localvore, edible forest, permaculture, no more car, 20 years without TV, conserve, do everything with love, life takes on new meaning. The projections of the current dominant paradigm are just that. In the words of Gil Scott Heron - the revolution will not be televised...the revolution will be live. It is peaceful, slow and will revolve from where we're headed to where we are.
I make my living as a scenic photographer. I live in a tiny village in the desert at the foot of the great eastern escarpment of the Sierra Nevada. A couple of summers ago I was backpacking in the Sierra. I met a couple along the trail, and they asked me if it was usual for there to be so few birds in the mountains. "Funny you should ask," I said. "I was wondering where all the birds have gone too. I hate to say it, but maybe the Silent Spring we have all been dreading for so long is finally upon us."
I was visiting my sister in Minnesota last November. She and her husband have a bird feeder in their front yard. Doug, her husband remarked that he only has to buy about 1/3 as much seed as he used to because the feeder just isn't as busy as it used to be. And my sister commented that she used to be awakened by the birds singing at dawn in the spring and summer, but that this past summer it had been eerily quiet in the morning.
I have 22 fruit trees in my back yard. Usually I can barely get any fruit before the birds finish it off, but last year the birds hardly touched the fruit trees or even my grape vines.
I eat organic and in the past couple of years have been drinking almost exclusively organic milk and I feel pretty good. Organic does cost more, but what is more important than your food?
Treefrog -- You're a joy to read. I'm LOL thinking that the "greening" of America's lawns may have had an impact on general dementia and possibly psychopathic tendencies. Laughing through tears that is.
Most wouldn't appreciate a chemist's joke about "don't lick your fingers to separate the filter paper". The truth is that the dude who might have died a horrible death, did exactly that, to accidentally end up making billion$ for Rumsfeld et. al with Nutrasweet (this is the absolute insider truth).
Yes, please do read the label, and learn not to over-spray.
IF good fences make for good neighbors - THEN maybe mine need to include neuro-toxin defense screening to become an even better (defensive) neighbor? Another new business opportunity.
Namaste
Irradiation does a lot more that lengthen shelf life, it creates novel substances and a whole lot more.
Jackgay: you are right to some degree about eating animals, but the natural world is about top carnivors and their eating other animals to survive and keep the herds in balance with the ability of the land to support roaming animals. "Humane" slaughter is preferable to some of the actions taken and our government regulations are specific about how to slaughter animals to minimize trauma. I, like so many others have been raised on eating meat and while I eat a lot less than in years past, I am definitely eating much less and being much pickier about how and what I eat. I want less hormones, less antibiotics, better living conditions for the animals and efficient, less painful ways to slaughter farm animals. Maybe one day, I will be about to go entirely without meat, by I think only eating it 3-4 days/week is a good start. As far as irradiation is concerned, so far, it only lengths the shelf life of the food. The oil prices will definitely play a part in what many of us purchase and buy-already has. I have less for entertaining and food than a year ago and drive much less than before. We need energy self-sufficiency asap.
Two points: One, the preference for domestic crops may not be universal: I buy pineapples only if they have a foreign tag, because I assume they're only being irradiated in hawaii.
Two, the issue may go away soon; what with peak oil and economic depression, we may all be shopping locally soon or growing our own.
This is a definite problem for those of us who like to eat well in the winter. I guess trying to choose organic is the best we can do, although I'm not a big believer in the 'organic' movement. Hopefully more consumer pressure and education for pesticide applicators will help. Just as we need better regulation and inspection for stopping lead-painted children's toys, we need restrictions on imports of foods with unacceptable levels of chemicals and a ban on any level of chemical which the US has deemed hazardous. I also worry that farmers the world over may consider increasing the use of pesticides in order to gain small increases in production in today's era of high food prices.
Rockerbabe1
You say that you do not eat animals that have been treated badly. I have to laugh at that because I guess you think that killing them is not treating them badly or considered abuse.
There is a lot to be said for eating "organic" labeled foods and eating what is grown domestically and locally.
The newest old saying "think globally, act locally" is very appropriate in today's climate. Local farmers' markets have a great abundance of foods and are quite affordable. In fact, I have stopped eating Tyson chicken because of the way they treat the birds in processing and I refuse to eat Asian fish from fish farms becasue of the the way the animals are being treated; the recent documentaries just made me sad, mad and a bit sick. It takes a little more effort to find acceptable foods, but well worth the effort. I don't care what the cost, I am not eating animals who have been treated badly. . .there is NO excuse for abuse of the food supply in any way shape or form.
http://www.wwf.ca/satellite/prip/factsheets/occupational-risks.html
I have a place for spiders, it is a dry wood pile and they like because it has foliage and other things they need. They help control some of the other insects like beetles. I am always finding little beetles wrapped up in a spider's nest. The beetles like the evening primose so I try not to let it spread to much. I don't use any chemicals. I did add some ladybugs and preyingmantis, thier and they have survived for quite awhile. I haven't seen a mantis for awhile so I think things might be out of balance again. I always have to many snails (to much food and no predators) I hand pick them and freeze them and then add to the compost. It has taken quite awhile to see a return of some insects but it will get more diversified. I also fed the earthworms and they are funny little creatures. I think a lot of people don't know what goes on in the world or the real impacts of adding chemicals to where you live. There are real health risks to using these chemicals. You should read labels and look up things like neurotoxins and dementia.
For several years I've felt like I'm on a foreign planet when it came to eating fruits and vegetables. I grew up on a farm where we had a huge garden that fed our family of seven year-round. Peas and corn tasted so good, and the outside was as tender as the inside. Carrots were delicious straight from the soil - we brushed them off on our clothes and chomped away.
Now peas and corn are so tough I can't chew them. Nothing smells or tastes as it once did. Tomatoes and strawberries are hard inside, and have no juice. Cherries only look like cherries.
I think about the generations already that don't even know what these veggies and fruits are supposed to taste like and the juice they should have. I feel sorry for them. And now it's worse with all the foreign pesticides we have to worry about.
Another huge thing killing off our songbirds if the way people think they have to have their precious yard and everything in it sprayed for "pests" every year.
I even go slug and cutworm hunting and send them off with my lawn clippings and other yard waste rather than putting something out to poison them. And I relocate any spiders I find where I don't want them - house and garage - even the widows. They all have their place on this earth.
JohnR,
I feel your pain and applaud your approach. While I am not poor, I too realize that my actions, like my purchases, have consequences. I am moving toward eating as locally as possible, something that can be hard during the long, Maine winters (gawd, will it ever end?).
sdw917,
I too realize that NAFTA and other entities are harming us, however, it is ultimately up to us, you and JohnR and myself, to do what we can to minimize our demand for these products. We have much information at our disposal and can make choices that are smart and benign. As Alice Walker wrote in another piece on CD - We are the ones we have been waiting for.
Let it start with me.
Until those of us in the USA demand a repeal of NAFTA and full disclosure as to what Monsanto and other poison companies are pushing on non-US growers, we will continue to silence spring ... Rachel Carson, we miss you.
One of the things that contributes greatly to this is restaurant suppliers that purchase produce from countries that use pesticides in these amounts.
I have to confess my guilt. I love mangoes and kiwis, bananas and cherries. They are my antidote to the winter blues as well as several mugs of coffee per day. I buy the cheaper, non-organic ones because I am poor. But I would hate to live on a planet without songbirds, so I'm going to try a little harder to buy things that don't kill them.
Dear Treefrog - What am I missing regarding your fox metaphor? Doesn't the fox sometimes get torn apart by hounds before he can heal himself?
Nature is beautiful and powerful, and we hardly merit the gift of this improbable earth; but things do not always work out as we might like. Let's not get loopy and let our love and respect for nature shade over into faux-mystical sentiment.
We can loose or not loose the hounds. Our choice.