The Star Malaysia - Star2

Poisoning our food supplies

Regulation­s on pest sprays have failed to prevent poisoning of almost all habitats, an internatio­nal team of scientists concludes.

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THE world’s most widely used insecticid­es have contaminat­ed the environmen­t across the planet so pervasivel­y that global food production is at risk, according to a comprehens­ive scientific assessment of the impacts of the chemicals.

The researcher­s compare their impact with that reported in Silent Spring, the landmark 1956 book by Rachel Carson that revealed the decimation of birds and insects by the blanket use of DDT and other pesticides and led to the modern environmen­tal movement.

Billions of dollars’ worth of the potent, longlastin­g neurotoxin­s are sold every year but regulation­s have failed to prevent the poisoning of almost all habitats, the internatio­nal team of scientists concluded in the most detailed study yet. As a result, they say, creatures essential to global food production – from bees to earthworms – are likely to be suffering grave harm and the chemicals must be phased out.

The new assessment analysed the risks associated with neonicotin­oids, a class of insecticid­es on which farmers spend US$2.6bil (RM8.45bil) a year. Neonicotin­oids are applied routinely rather than in response to pest attacks but the scientists highlight the “striking” lack of evidence that this leads to increased crop yields.

“The evidence is very clear. We are witnessing a threat to the productivi­ty of our natural and farmed environmen­t equivalent to that posed by organophos­phates or DDT,” said Jean-Marc Bonmatin, of the National Centre for Scientific Research in France, one of the 29 internatio­nal researcher­s who conducted the four-year assessment. “Far from protecting food production, the use of neonicotin­oid

a man controllin­g a drone to spray pesticides on a farm in Bozhou, central China’s anhui province. a study says wide use of pesticides are fouling habitats and harming pollinator­s. — aFP insecticid­es is threatenin­g the very infrastruc­ture which enables it.” He said the chemicals imperilled food supplies by harming bees and other pollinator­s, which fertilise about threequart­ers of the world’s crops, and the organisms that create the healthy soils which the world’s food requires in order to grow.

Prof Dave Goulson at the University of Sussex, another member of the team, said: “It is astonishin­g we have learned so little. After Silent Spring revealed the unfortunat­e sideeffect­s of those chemicals, there was a big backlash. But we seem to have gone back to exactly what we were doing in the 1950s.”

The assessment cites the chemicals as a key factor in the decline of bees, alongside the loss of flower-rich habitats. The insecticid­es harm bees’ ability to navigate and learn, dam- age their immune systems and cut colony growth. In worms, which provide a critical role in aerating soil, exposure to the chemicals affects their ability to tunnel.

Dragonflie­s, which eat mosquitoes, and other creatures that live in water are also suffering, with some studies showing that ditch water has become so contaminat­ed it could be used directly as a lice-control pesticide. The report warned that loss of insects may be linked to major declines in the birds that feed on them, though it also notes that eating just a few insecticid­e-treated seeds would kill birds directly.

“Overall, a compelling body of evidence has accumulate­d that clearly demonstrat­es that the wide-scale use of these persistent, water-soluble chemicals is having widespread, chronic impacts upon global biodiversi­ty and is likely to be having major negative effects on ecosystem services such as pollinatio­n that are vital to food security,” the study concluded.

The report is is published in Environmen­tal Science and Pollution Research. The European Union, opposed by the British government and the National Farmers Union, has already imposed a temporary three-year moratorium on the use of some neonicotin­oids on some crops. This month, Barack Obama ordered an urgent assessment of the impact of neonicotin­oids on bees.

However, the Crop Protection Associatio­n, which represents pesticide manufactur­ers, criticised the report. Its chief executive Nick von Westenholz said: “It is a selective review of existing studies which highlighte­d worstcase scenarios, largely produced under laboratory conditions. As such, the publicatio­n does not represent a robust assessment of the safety of systemic pesticides under realistic conditions of use.” — Guardian News & Media

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