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Have We Learned Nothing Since "Silent Spring"?
Nicotine, found in tobacco, is a deadly substance - and not only for smokers. It has long been known as a powerful natural insecticide, and its presence in the tobacco crop has evolved to deter pests; it is toxic to virtually all of them (except one, the Carolina sphinx moth, whose fat green caterpillar, known in the US as the tobacco hornworm, has evolved a way of dealing with it).
Nicotine is a neurotoxin, that is, it attacks the insect nervous system. In recent years, pesticide companies such as the German giant Bayer have developed a group of compounds which act in a similar way; they have been christened neonicotinoids ("new nicotine-like things"). Neonicotinoids are now among the most widely-used insecticides because they are very effective, and they are effective because they are "systemic". That means that they do not simply sit on the plant's surface but are taken up into the plant itself, so that any part of it becomes toxic to the aphid or other troublesome wee beastie attempting to feed upon it.
Unfortunately, when we say "any part", that is literally true: not only the stem and the leaves are contaminated but so, even at the heart of the plant's flowers, are its pollen and its nectar. And when pollinating insects come along to gather them, such as honeybees, bumblebees, solitary bees, moths, butterflies, or hoverflies, which are by no means the "target" species of the insecticide, they get a shot of poison nonetheless. They may get a tiny shot. But each time they buzz to a contaminated flower for more pollen or nectar, they get another one. And another one. And another one.
In the great mysterious crash of bee populations, which has been gathering speed around the world for the past decade or so, and which has started to alarm even governments because of the vast worth of bee pollination to the agricultural economy (more than £12bn annually just in Europe), neonicotinoids are increasingly suspect. In the great crash of other insect populations which has similarly been taking place, about which governments do not give a toss but which nonetheless threatens the natural environment with catastrophe (many insectivorous birds are dropping dramatically in numbers), neonicotinoids are similarly in the frame.
For they do not only pose problems through pollination. Neonicotinoids persist in the soil and have high leaching potential, meaning that they can not only harm soil organisms but can be washed out and end up contaminating water bodies, and they may be implicated in the enormous decline in aquatic insects such as mayflies which we have seen in recent years.
So how can such pesticides be licensed for use? In European countries, the initial licensing is done at European Union level by way of a Draft Assessment Report (DAR); but although the basic research for it is usually done by independent scientists, the organisation of the report - remarkably, you may think - is carried out by the manufacturer. So the DAR for the commonest neonicotinoid, which is called imidacloprid, was put together by Bayer, which makes imidacloprid, and which makes many millions of pounds from it every year. And guess what? Bayer's report found no reason why it should not be approved!
Fifteen months ago, however, the British invertebrate conservation charity Buglife conducted a review of all the available scientific literature about the effects of neonicotinoids, and imidacloprid in particular, on non-target insect species; this produced a much more troubling picture. Referring directly to 100 independent, peer-reviewed scientific papers, the Buglife study highlighted a raft of concerns that neonicotinoids are indeed harmful for bees and other pollinating insects, especially chronically (that is, through tiny doses ingested from repeated visits to contaminated flowers) - something which the testing methodology of the imidacloprid DAR, the Buglife study said, simply did not pick up.
These concerns have become widely shared, at the national level - France, Germany, Italy and Slovenia have all banned neonicotinoids to a greater or lesser degree - and they have been further heightened by the recent leak of a confidential internal memo from the US Environmental Protection Agency, which warned that bees and other insects were at risk from another Bayer-produced neonicotinoid, currently on the market, called clothianidin.
The British response? Zero. At present, despite the concerns, about 30 products containing imidacloprid are cheerfully licensed for use on British farms and in British gardens. But then the British government, especially the present one, is very relaxed about pesticides, as was made clear by the junior environment minister, Lord Henley, in his response before Christmas to new EU legislation on sustainable pesticide use. He could have brought in various improvements on the back of it, such as a ban on pesticides near schools, playgrounds or hospitals, or a mandatory requirement to notify communities before pesticide spraying which might affect them. He chose to do nothing.
Yet many might think that applying substantial doses of poison to the landscape is hardly an issue to be relaxed about: get it wrong and the consequences are horrendous. Rachel Carson first showed us that 50 years ago next year when she published Silent Spring, the book which, in documenting the terrible toll pesticides were taking on American wildlife, effectively launched the modern environment movement. Carson's concern then was organochlorine substances, principally DDT. But looking at neonicotinoids, and the mounting evidence against them, and the persistence of their use, the thought is overwhelming: have we learned nothing in 50 years? Carson feared a world without birdsong; and here we are fearing a world without bees, half a century on.
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25 Comments so far
Show AllThe death of our ecosystem would sure solve a lot of our other problems peak oil, global warming, war, housing bubble, you name it
Particularly overpopulation which some of us think might be the root cause of all environmental problems.
Poison is our calling card. We are a "Death kultur."
Have we learned nothing since "Silent Spring"?
Short answer--nothing is exactly what we learned. The manufacturers of these poisons have learned how to hide facts though, very well.
What has been learned is that the big pollutionist corporations have learned how to make commercials that depict them as sympathetic to and a part of the environmental team -- "human energy," and all those stories about baby wild beasts being gently moved from harm's way, humpback whales for an insurance company. One of my greatest fears is that this isn't conscious cynicism on their part, that they watch the commercials their paid consultants create and believe they're doing more good than harm. And I know for a fact that many of the folks out in Middleamericaland see these commercials and feel genuinely reassured.
Life is about the birds and the bees.
The obvious question that Mr. McCarthy does not address is if France, Germany, Italy and Slovenia all banned this group of pesticides, did the bee populations in these countries rebound compared to the UK where they're still in use?
so, is this world a 'last living thing' contest?
if the last human, just before expiring, observes the death of the last something else, then humans win?
what's the prize?
All the candy in the world.
Nature has a way of creating balance. As a "for instance," the deer multiply beyond their food supply, become sickly and subject to various diseases. Predators come in and cull the herds As the predators run out of food, they decline in population. Eventually, both populations stabilize.
Man, being a clever omnivore, has been able to sustain his unlimited growth. Chemical fertilizers to stimulate crop growth (and incidentally salinizing the soil), diseases are met with various chemicals to fight them off. The population increases. Energy is required, so the planet is stripped for fuel, forests are cut down and fields covered with concrete to build endless ticky-tacky boxes to house the burgeoning population. Every epidemic is met with more chemicals.
We have no predators but us. We can now incinerate the globe in a matter of hours, but that is an option so far not chosen. However, through science, nicitinoids et al., perhaps Nature has found a way to get rid of us. If there are no pollinators, there is no food. If there is no food, people will die in the billions. With luck. they just might take the greedy Oligarchy with their hordes of food and "secure" dwellings with them. If not, these wealthy parasites will no doubt live on in lonely splendor for a generation or two before they, too, go screaming into the same void that took the dinosaurs.
My main regret is that so many wonderful beings on this planet must be sacrificed just to try to return us to ecological balance or get rid of us.
I sometimes imagine God entering the lab and telling Gabriel, "Phew! That Petri dish is really beginning to stink. Dump it, wash it out and we'll try something else."
"We have met the enemy, and he is us." Pogo
Brillant. Just what I was thinking vdamn the humans. Let the animals have it. WE have been the parasites on this rock since man first crawled out of a cave and murdered his brother.
"Have We Leared Nothing Since 'Silent Spring'?"
__________________________________
I'm not exactly sure what "learing" is, unless it means writing doggerel like this:
There was an Old Man who supposed,
That the street door was partially closed;
But some very large rats,
Ate his coats and his hats,
While that futile old gentleman dozed.
If nothing else, we have "leared" to greenwash!
lear ~ verb ~ derived from the the 70s 'Norman'...
to deliver or adapt successful ideas to new markets, or to spin further success off of original ones...
Thanks, dubet!
Now the question becomes, "Is our children learing?"
Related stories:
http://www.grist.org/article/food-2010-12-10-leaked-documents-show-epa-allowed-bee-toxic-pesticide-
http://www.grist.org/article/food-2010-12-23-epa-swats-away-bee-killing-pesticide-controversy
Peace
When I moved many years ago the old house we bought had a barn and in it I found an old can of "nicotine" for pesticide use on crops. It was quite common to use it years ago and quite effective. When I was researching for a quit smoking lecture, I came across the fact that one drop of pure nicotine, if taken in by an adult person, would kill him or her. Of course in tobacco smoke one is only inhaling minute quantities, but it was an eye opener.
The problem is heavy with issues about corporate "personhood" and growth as the only measure of business.
In addition to Carson, another voice from 50 years ago, R. Buckminster Fuller, stated that runaway commercial activity of the corporate "pirates" had to be quickly, effectively reconstructed to make the success of the species the prime mover of human activity, not growth and profit.---"Utopia or Oblivion".
A voice from 80 years ago, Chief Black Elk, echoing wisdom passed from generation to generation (children of the last Iceage, as are we) for 10,000 years, said, "The only things that work well are the things that work the way Nature works." Also, from the Chief: in his rituals, each compass direction had a name and other associations...the name for the North was, "Where the Great White Giant lives". That would be information from the last glacial maximum about 14kya.
We only get clues and heart-felt recommendations from the wise ones. If we could make the jump from clever to wise we might have a friggin chance...
Try to imagine how we would feel if some "superior" species were doing the things we're doing to other species, the planet, and ourselves.
Corruption, no more and no less. No scientist whose income comes, even partially, from the sale of a product, has any business being involved in the evaluation of the safety of that product.
Doh!
It cannot be said enough that THE ROOT OF OUR PROBLEMS IS THE CORPORATE BUSINESS FORM based on growth/profit.
The corporate system floats the WRONG people (sociopathic, willing to pull every string, take every shortcut, exploit anything/everything for short term share value) to the top for the WRONG reasons where they make WRONG decisions.
Our greater mistake is---we let this continue. We are complicit in the killing of our ecosystem.
This heirarchical, greed-based culture is a dead end for humanity.
To withdraw your support of it at every opportunity is a rational survival tactic.
Some of us, like Jensen and other champions of the environment, have learned a lot.
However, the people in power have only "learned" more devious means of hiding their utter disdain fot the ecosphere. All they do is extend and pretend. We are ruled by suicidal monsters.
power=power=power. period.
Was it the Bayer Co. that makes lots of this stuff? Same outfit that tells use how good aspirin can be for some of us, which it is, and then charges several times more for the very same generic or house brand thing.
We target tobacco for a very American reason: Very few use it. It's like howling that welfare was "breaking the federal budget" (at it's highest in the '70's, it used 6% of the fed budget) while handing billions of dollars annually to corporations that have steadily been moving our jobs out of the country. It's like waging wars on tiny countries, an American tradition ever since the end of WWll. It's like "getting tough on" jaywalkers while ignoring the bloody gang war one block down.
The most carcinogenic type of smoke is the kind that contains oil particles -- primarily from motor vehicles, but not from tobacco. Under 18% of US adults smoke, and restrictions are so extreme that most Americans have no exposure to tobacco smoke whatsoever -- yet rates of breathing-related disease continue to escalate. Exposure to the fumes of a passing car is far more dangerous than sitting in a room with a chain smoker. The difference: While so few smoke, most of us drive, and it is an unshakable American belief that we should have the right to drive as much as we wish. So, we won't discuss it. We're so hell bent on killing that mosquito that we ignore the lion on our heels.
As long as a gullible public can easily be distracted by comparative non-issues, it isn't very likely that we'll find time to deal with the hard issues and true crises we face.