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Clothianidin Pesticide Harms Honeybees And Must Be Banned, Beekeepers Claim

Posted: 03/21/2012 6:37 pm

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Commercial beekeepers and environmental organizations filed a petition Wednesday, asking federal regulators to suspend use of a pesticide they say harms honeybees.

The group is urging the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to ban the insecticide clothianidin, one of a class of chemicals that act on the central nervous system of insects.

Over 1.25 million people also submitted comments in partnership with the organizations, calling on EPA to take action.

Beekeepers and some scientists say the chemicals known as neonicotinoids are lethal to bees and weaken their immune systems, making them more susceptible to pathogens. They say it could contribute to colony collapse disorder, in which all the adult honey bees in a colony suddenly disappear or die.

The disorder continues to decimate hives in the U.S. and overseas. Since it was recognized in 2006, the disease has destroyed colonies at a rate of about 30 percent a year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Before that, losses were about 15 percent a year from a variety of pests and diseases.

Beekeepers annually replace those hives.

In response to calls for the ban on clothianidin and other neonicotinoids, the EPA is currently conducting a re-evaluation of these pesticides. France, Germany and Italy have limited or banned the use of neonicotinoids.

Bees pollinate about a third of U.S. crops.

California is the nation's main producer of fruits and vegetables. Well over half of the bees from around the country are brought to the state at the end of February for almond pollination.

Beekeepers and environmentalists say the EPA ignored its own requirements and failed to study the impacts of clothianidin on bees. The agency granted a conditional registration to clothianidin in 2003, contingent on the submission of a field study establishing that the pesticide would have no unreasonable adverse effects on pollinators.

The field study was later submitted, but last year the agency found the study poorly designed and deficient. No other studies have been done to replace it, and the agency said pollinator field studies are limited in their utility.

The agency also said it evaluated clothianidin based on 34 scientific studies and that the chemical poses less risk to workers and wildlife than alternatives. While data show clothianidin is toxic to honeybees, the EPA says there's no proven link to bee colony die-offs from exposure to the chemical.

Some researchers disagree. And while no one has been able to determine what causes colony collapse, most researchers point to a combination of factors, including pesticide contamination.

Use of clothianidin and other neonicotinoids is most worrisome, said Jim Frazier, professor of entomology at Penn State University, because the chemicals treat millions of acres of corn and other genetically modified plants throughout the U.S. Data show that the chemicals builds up over time in the soil, plants and trees, he said.

Frazier said studies have shown that clothianidin is toxic to bees. The pollen that bees take back to their colonies contains the chemical, as does the dust that comes off planters.

"The EPA admits that their testing has not been adequate to determine the impact of this chemical on bees and pollinators," Frazier said, adding that while a direct link between clothianidin and colony collapse has not been established, more studies are needed.

Beekeeper Jeff Anderson of California Minnesota Honey Farms, a co-petitioner, said he believes clothianidin is weakening and killing his bees. Every year, he sees more bees die off when he stations them in Minnesota, especially when soy and corn treated with clothianidin are being planted.

"It's a subtle long-term issue," Anderson said. "It's like giving bees AIDS. Their immune systems are down and all the pathogens and viruses become virulent. So the bees succumb much more readily."

In recent years, Anderson said he lost over 30 percent of his bees during the winter and more during the rest of season.

Anderson, who has pollinated California's almonds and cherries for more than 30 years, said he's backing away from cherry pollination because the trees are sprayed with the chemical.

"They do it after we remove the bees, but the trees are retaining the chemical from one season to the next and creating a situation where the bloom is becoming toxic," Anderson said.

Bayer CropScience recently announced the removal of almonds from the pesticide label for imidacloprid — another neonicotinoid — in California, thereby eliminating the use of the product in almond orchards, in response to concerns by the scientific community about the product's impacts on honeybees.

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FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Commercial beekeepers and environmental organizations filed a petition Wednesday, asking federal regulators to suspend use of a pesticide they say harms honeybees. ...
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Commercial beekeepers and environmental organizations filed a petition Wednesday, asking federal regulators to suspend use of a pesticide they say harms honeybees. ...
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12:52 AM on 04/29/2012
As usual, Profit before People. Beelogics (a leading bee research firm) was recently bought by Monsanto. The motivation is obvious and the intent nefarious at best.
07:33 PM on 03/29/2012
Damn near every method of treatment available to beekeepers for treatment against mites gets banned yet Bayer can get away with destroying the pollinators of over 1/3 our food and the EPA/USDA does nothing. Money talks, beekeepers and the public suffer.
08:41 PM on 03/28/2012
Canola is grown commercially mostly on the prairies in Canada. In 2008, 16.6 million acres (6.6 million ha) were planted and the acreage is expanding. There are 52,000 canola producers. Canada is the largest single producer of canola in the world.

Commercially grown canola is predominantly a prairie crop. It is so common that 80% of Canada’s honey crop is from canola. This amounts to 50 million lb per year of Grade No 1 white honey.

Approximately 300,000 colonies harvest open pollinated canola. The expanding hybrid seed production industry, where farmers produce seed under contract to the seed companies, required 80,000 colonies in 2008 for pollination in southern Alberta.

Most canola seeds are now treated with systemic insecticides such as Gaucho® (imidacloprid), Poncho® (chlothianidin) or Helix® (thiamethoxan). Although there is an expressed concern by many beekeepers around the world about the use of systemics, the experience in Canada is that we have had 10 years of large scale use on canola with no observed ill effect.

Pollinating Hybrid Canola - the Southern Alberta Experience
Heather Clay, Chief Executive Officer, Canadian Honey Council, Calgary, AB
scorp1353
You talkin' to me?
06:05 PM on 03/23/2012
No mention ever of the destructive forces of the cell phone tower. talked to a man in so cal whose olive grove production has been dwindling since a tower was installed near his groves. the microwave output confuses the bees. Any word from the EPA on this? Bees are an imperative to our food supply. Since i'm ranting, nothing from them or animal rights no fines etc. for all the birds killed especially the golden eagle (protected species) by the windwill farms.
12:32 PM on 03/23/2012
This is serious stuff. Bee afraid. Bee VERY afraid. Pun intended. ...and we've got to get ourselves back to the garden.
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10:25 AM on 03/23/2012
The bee. Another casualty on the mission to moving us closer to a fully synthetic food industry.
10:28 PM on 03/22/2012
Republicans want to end the EPA.

Republicans want to end Medicare and give you a voucher.

Republicans want to end Social Security and give you a 201K.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Punks
07:11 PM on 03/22/2012
We are beekeepers in SW Missouri. Half our hives were dead again this spring after a very mild winter. Every year, it gets worse.

When will these bought and paid for congress people and their corporate cronies stop leading us like lemmings over a cliff.

Go to Pesticide Action Network and read about the issue and do something about it:

"Today, PAN joined beekeepers and partners Beyond Pesticides and Center for Food Safety in filing a legal petition that calls on EPA to suspend registration of Bayer’s controversial bee-toxic pesticide, clothianidin."

Do the bees and humanity a favor and sign the petition.
BlackbirdHighway
Brawndo's got electrolites!
06:34 PM on 03/22/2012
From what I've read, even very small amounts of this stuff, less than 1 part per billion, are not toxic to bees but it causes their tiny brains to malfunction. As a result, they fly away from the hive but can't find their way back. That explains what beekeepers see, empty nests and no dead bees.
It was banned in Europe for that very reason. In the US, the manufacturer was able to avoid the ban by claiming that it is non-toxic to bees. That is true, it is non-toxic to bees but it is still deadly to the nest by making them loose the ability to fly back home.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MFM008
I have a headache.
04:31 PM on 03/22/2012
to bee or not to bee. Save the Bee. Write the EPA. The BAYER corp produces this crap. Boycott. We need bees.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
g-moi
Let's GoGreen. We Can Do It.
12:47 PM on 03/22/2012
If we value our own hind quarters we better stop using pesticides now, along with a few other things we'd better start correcting.
11:38 AM on 03/22/2012
Canary in the coal mine.

Clean air, water and land is something we all need to survive.

When will Republicans figure it out?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doodlebug2
11:11 AM on 03/22/2012
I love bees, by bees
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Artemesian
Spiritual Messenger of the Earth
10:50 AM on 03/22/2012
Yes, bees are one of nature's miracles. We need to protect and save them!
Bellla
Trans & Proud
09:41 AM on 03/22/2012
This is incredibly important! Without honeybees to pollinate, most of our food crops will not be growing. Already honeybees are in terrible shape, and they are so very important to agriculture!
But watch the Agrichem companies try to derail this...