Two new studies confirm the danger of neonicotinoid insecticides.
After years of back-and-forth speculation and conflicting studies from countries around the world, it seems fair to say neonicotinoids insecticides are causing dramatic weakening of honeybee hives. The “neonics” are a class of pesticide that has previously been linked to declines in bee populations. Neonics were developed in 1991 and commercial use began in the mid-1990s. Around 2006, commercial beekeepers began reporting what is now known as colony collapse disorder — where entire colonies of bees die off with no obvious cause. The disorder has been reported in commercial colonies all over the world. Several studies have implicated neonics, which are used to kill insects harmful to crops. Two new studies seem to confirm the danger of the class of insecticides.
The first study involved researchers in Hungary, Britain, and Germany planting fields of rapeseed, which is commonly used as a cooking oil. Some of the fields were sown with seeds treated with neonicotinoids while others were planted with untreated seeds. The teams studied the bees from spring 2015 until the following spring.
“In Hungary and Britain, the hives that had bees foraging around insecticide-treated plants had a more difficult time surviving the winter,” the Associated Press reported.” In Germany, where the bees are generally healthier, there was no noticeable harm to the bees from the insecticide.”
The study, “Country-specific effects of neonicotinoid pesticides on honey bees and wild bees,” was published in the journal Science on Thursday. “These findings point to neonicotinoids causing a reduced capacity of bee species to establish new populations in the year following exposure,” the researchers write.
“We showed significant negative effects at critical life cycle stages,” Prof Richard Pywell, of the UK’s Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH), told The Guardian. “If the bees are foraging a lot on oil seed rape, they are clearly at risk. This is a large and important piece of evidence, but it is not the only evidence regulators will look at.”
Bayer and Syngenta, biotech corporations involved in the production of neonics, called the study “simplistic” and “inconsistent.”
Disturbingly, the researchers also report that the wild bees were exposed to neonicotinoids that were not used in the study. This caused the team to conclude that harm could result from “persistent residues in arable systems due to their widespread and often very frequent use.” A second study published in Science looked at Canadian corn farms and also reached this conclusion.
Researchers at York University in Canada found that wild bees are not only exposed to neonics via spraying, but also through wildflowers. “This indicates that neonicotinoids, which are water soluble, spill over from fields into the surrounding environment, where they are taken up by other plants that are very attractive to bees,” said Nadia Tsvetkov, lead researcher with York University.
York University researchers also found that neonicotinoids are twice as toxic to bees when combined with the fungicide boscalid. Prof Valérie Fournier, researcher from Laval University in Canada, told The Guardian that pesticides are not tested together. “This study shows that mixtures matter.”
Unfortunately, the dangers of neonicotinoids have been known for some time. A July 2016 study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B found that neonicotinoids do not kill drone honey bees, but instead drastically reduce the amount of live sperm produced by the male population. Researchers at Switzerland’s University of Bern found that the bees who ate pollen treated with neonicotinoids produced 39 percent less live sperm than the bees who did not eat the treated pollen.
In September 2015 a federal appeals court dealt a huge blow to the pesticide industry by issuing a ruling that blocks the use of neonics. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the U.S. EPA insufficiently tested the pesticide sulfoxaflor before approving its use in 2013. Sulfoxaflor is a type of neonicotinoid. Circuit Judge Mary Schroeder stated the EPA should have done further research once initial studies showed sulfoxaflor was highly toxic to honeybees.
The backlash against neonics caused at least one company to abandon them. In April 2016, Scotts Miracle-Gro announced that it would stop selling neonics. Although Scotts Miracle-Gro should be commended for putting on hold the production of these controversial chemicals, we should also remember that the neonics are not the only class of pesticides which have been linked to harm to the environment and animals. To truly stop the degradation that is happening to the planet and all its inhabitants, we must create and promote localized solutions for food production that do not depend on the factory farming complex and their pesticides.
Upon closer examination it would seem there is an organized effort to keep the public ignorant to the dangers of neonicotinoids. United States Department of Agriculture researcher Dr. Jonathan Lundgren filed an internal complaint in September 2014 accusing the USDA of retaliating against him in response to his neonicotinoids research. The complaint was dismissed by the USDA and Lundgren was suspended in October 2014. On October 28, 2015, Lundgren filed a complaint with the federal Merit Systems Protection Board after his supervisors allegedly began to “impede or deter his research and resultant publications.” Lundgren’s complaint alleges that his supervisors suspended him in retaliation for his research on neonicotinoid pesticides and also calls for an investigation of both the USDA and the EPA. Lundgren’s complaint is now moving forward and will hopefully provide some more insight into the possible dangers of the neonicotinoid.
Derrick Broze is an investigative journalist and liberty activist. He is the Lead Investigative Reporter for ActivistPost.com and the founder of the TheConsciousResistance.com. Follow him on Twitter. Derrick is the author of three books: The Conscious Resistance: Reflections on Anarchy and Spirituality and Finding Freedom in an Age of Confusion, Vol. 1 and Finding Freedom in an Age of Confusion, Vol. 2
Derrick is available for interviews. Please contact [email protected]
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I plant many shrubs and flowers in my garden to support the bees and this year I haven’t seen hardly any bumble bees, only a few unusually small ones with an orange stripe that used to be around all the time. Lots of honey bees though.
With >4000 species, there are many more native bees than honey bees in N. America. Some bumble bee species are nearing extinction. Seems more is going on than the pesticides and herbicides and, unfortunately, the focus is primarily on honey bees.
What about geoengineering?
[Interesting USDA illustrated brochure on native bees: https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5306468.pdf%5D
Neonics have been devastating to the Monarch butterfly population, also. The effect on natural pollination will be felt for years, if we survive that long.