Oroville Mercury-Register

Study: US pesticide use falls but harms pollinator­s more

- By Seth Borenstein

American farmers are using smaller amounts of better targeted pesticides, but these are harming pollinator­s, aquatic insects and some plants far more than decades ago, a new study finds.

Toxicity levels have more than doubled since 2005 for important species, including honeybees, mayflies and buttercup flowers, as the country switched to a new generation of pesticides. But dangerous chemical levels in birds and mammals have plummeted at the same time, according to a paper in Thursday’s journal Science.

“The bottom line is that these pesticides, once believed to be relatively benign and so short-lived that they would not damage ecosystems, are anything but,” said Dr. Lynn Goldman, a former U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency assistant administra­tor for toxic substances who wasn’t part of the study and is now dean of George Washington University’s school of public health.

German scientists examined 381 pesticides used in the United States between 1992 and 2016, combining EPA data that calculates toxic dosage effects for eight types of animals and plants with U. S. Geological Survey data on how much of the chemicals were used year by year for dozens of agricultur­al crops. The scientists calculated a new measuremen­t they call total applied toxicity for the eight groupings of species and trends over time.

“Very often politician­s, media, scientists just talk about amounts. They always argue ‘OK, the amount pesticides we use is reduced so things are getting better’ and this is not necessaril­y true,” said lead author Ralf Schulz, a professor of environmen­tal sciences at the University of Kolenz-Landau. “It’s sometimes true, but not always,”

Industry keeps developing new pesticides and “very often these new compounds are more toxic,” Schulz said. They include neonicotin­oids, which have been connected to one of the many causes of dwindling honeybee numbers.

The newer pesticides are aimed more toward animals without backbones to spare birds and mammals, but this means insects such as pollinator­s get poisoned, Schulz said.

The same goes for some land plants and for aquatic invertebra­tes including dragonflie­s and mayflies, which birds and mammals eat, he said, adding that future studies should look at the harm higher up the food chain.

Chris Novak, president of the pesticide industry group CropLife America, said in an email that “it is critical to note that the study found great reductions in acute toxicity have been achieved for humans and mammals over the past few decades.”

Novak noted pesticides go through extensive studies and “only one in 10,000 discoverie­s make the 11year journey from the lab to the market.”

It’s not surprising that newer generation­s of pesticides generally are more harmful to insects, which are undergoing a massive decline for many reasons, said University of Connecticu­t entomologi­st David Wagner, who wasn’t part of the study. But Wagner said this newest research doesn’t provide data needed to show “that pesticides are the major driver of insect declines.”

 ?? DAVE MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A crop duster sprays a field in Alabama.
DAVE MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A crop duster sprays a field in Alabama.

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