The Guardian (USA)

Alarm as pesticides spur rapid decline of US bird species

- Valerie Yurk in Washington

Popular pesticides are causing bird species to decline at an alarming rate in the US, adding fuel to a 50-year downward trend in bird biodiversi­ty, a new report has found.

In addition to spray-on pesticides, farmers are widely using chemicals that coat seeds. These pesticides, called neonicotin­oids or neonics, deter insects as the seeds sprout and as they grow into plants.

According to a study published in Nature Sustainabi­lity, the increased use of neonicotin­oids is putting bird species at risk across the US as the chemicals manifest in the stalk, nectar and pollen of plants.

Madhu Khanna, a study co-author and associate director of research at the Institute of Sustainabi­lity, Energy and Environmen­t at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said a 100kg increase in the use of this seed-coating pesticide in one US county was linked with a 2.2% decrease in grassland birds.

Non-neonicotin­oid pesticides were linked with only a 0.05% decrease.

When birds eat the pesticide-coated seeds or insects that have pollinated neonicotin­oid-treated plants, the chemicals can harm bird developmen­t. Over time, they decrease birds’ abilities to reproduce. The chemicals can have an effect for years after birds consume them.

Neonicotin­oids have increased in popularity among farmers because they do not have to be reapplied once plants are growing. However, past studies have also linked the pesticides to decreases in important pollinator­s, like bees and butterflie­s, which prompted the European Union to ban nearly all neonicotin­oids.

The Trump administra­tion has rolled back restrictio­ns on neonicotin­oids and approved a new one for use last summer.

The US and Canada have lost 29% of its birds since 1970, due to cropland expansions and pesticides use. Khanna said she expects bird population­s to continue to decrease as climate change worsens and changes available habitats.

From 2008 to 2014, the researcher­s estimate that the population­s of grassland birds – including sparrows and owls – declined 4% annually, and insecteati­ng birds fell 3% annually because of neonicotin­oids.

More than half of the US counties studied lost more than 10% of their grassland birds due to neonicotin­oid use over that time period.

Khanna said those losses can be damaging to the broader environmen­t.

“Anything that can have an impact beyond what the target species are is concerning,” Khanna said. “Given the integrated nature of our ecosystem, the loss of any one part adversely affects the whole.”

The researcher­s found that bird species in the midwest and Great Plains, where farmers have been expanding cropland and increasing­ly using pesticide-coated seeds, were hit the hardest. Bird population­s expanded in some areas of the US that have shifted away from agricultur­e, including Arizona, Nevada and Maine.

 ?? Photograph: Matthew Cuda/Alamy ?? A white-throated sparrow in North Carolina. More than half of the US counties studied lost morethan 10% of their grassland birds due to neonicotin­oid use between 2008 and 2014.
Photograph: Matthew Cuda/Alamy A white-throated sparrow in North Carolina. More than half of the US counties studied lost morethan 10% of their grassland birds due to neonicotin­oid use between 2008 and 2014.

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