Pesticides: Now More Than Ever
By MARK BITTMAN
How quickly we forget.
After the publication of "Silent Spring," 50 years ago, we
(scientists, environmental and health advocates, birdwatchers, citizens)
managed to curb the use of pesticides[1] and our
exposure to them -- only to see their application grow and grow to the point
where American agriculture uses more of them than ever before.
And the threat is more acute than ever. While Rachel Carson[2] focused on
their effect on "nature," it's become obvious that farmworkers need protection
from direct exposure while applying chemicals to crops[3] . Less
well known are the recent studiesshowing that routine, casual,
continuing -- what you might call chronic -- exposure to pesticides is damaging
not only to flora but to all creatures, including the one that habitually
considers itself above it all: us.
As usual, there are catalysts for this column; in this case they
number three.
I was impressed by a statement by the American Association of Pediatrics -- not exactly a radical organization -- warning parents of the dangers of pesticide and recommending that they try to reduce contact with them. The accompanying report calls the evidence "robust" for associations between pesticide exposure and cancer (specifically brain tumors and leukemia) and "adverse" neurodevelopment, including lowered I.Q., autism, and attention disorders and hyperactivity. (Alzheimer's, obviously not a pediatric concern, has also been linked to pesticide exposure.)
I was impressed by a statement by the American Association of Pediatrics -- not exactly a radical organization -- warning parents of the dangers of pesticide and recommending that they try to reduce contact with them. The accompanying report calls the evidence "robust" for associations between pesticide exposure and cancer (specifically brain tumors and leukemia) and "adverse" neurodevelopment, including lowered I.Q., autism, and attention disorders and hyperactivity. (Alzheimer's, obviously not a pediatric concern, has also been linked to pesticide exposure.)
This reminded me of recently disclosed evidence showing that pesticide
exposure in pregnant women may be obesogenic -- that is, it may cause their children to
tend to become obese. The mechanism for this is beginning to be understood, and
it's not entirely shocking, because many pesticides have been shown to be
endocrine disruptors, changing gene expression patterns and causing unforeseen
harm to health.
And that in turn prompted me to recall that genetically
engineered crops, ostensibly designed in part to reduce the need for pesticides, have --
thanks to pesticide-resistant "superweeds" -- actually increased our pesticide use steadily over the last decade or so. (In
general, fields growing crops using genetically engineered seeds use 24 percent
more chemicals than those grown with conventional seeds.)
Although these all caught my attention, the most striking
non-event of the last year -- decade, generation -- is how asleep at the wheel
we have all been regarding pesticides. Because every human tested is found to have pesticides in his or her body fat. And because pesticides are found in nearly every stream in the United States, over
90 percent of wells, and -- in urban and agricultural areas -- over half the
groundwater. So Department of Agriculture data show that the average American is exposed to
10 or more pesticides every day, via diet and drinking water.
This shouldn't be surprising: pesticide drift is a term used to describe the phenomenon by
which almost all pesticides -- 95 to 98 percent is
the number I've seen -- wind up on or in something other than their intended
target. (This means, of course, that in order to be effective more pesticides
must be used than would be necessary if targeting were more accurate.)
Much damage has been done, and it's going to get worse before it
gets better. The long-term solution is to reduce pesticide use, and the ways to
do that include some of the typical laundry-list items that find their way into
every "how to improve American agriculture" story: rotate crops,
which reduces attacks by invasive species; employ integrated
pest management, which basically means "think before you
spray"; better regulate pesticides (and both increase funding for and
eliminate the revolving door policy at the Environmental Protection Agency)
with an eye toward protecting the most vulnerable -- that is, farmworkers,
anyone of childbearing age, and especially women in their first trimester of
pregnancy
[4]; give farmers options for "conventional," that is, non-genetically engineered seeds (around 95 percent of all seeds for soy, corn and cotton contain a pesticide-resistant gene, which encourages wanton spraying); and in general move toward using more organic principles.
[4]; give farmers options for "conventional," that is, non-genetically engineered seeds (around 95 percent of all seeds for soy, corn and cotton contain a pesticide-resistant gene, which encourages wanton spraying); and in general move toward using more organic principles.
Note, please, that only this last strategy helps us protect
ourselves and our families now. But although there's the usual disclaimer that
not everyone can afford organic food, at a time when organic food has been
under attack it's important to remember that part of the very reason for its
existence is to bring food to the market that, if not free of all traces of
pesticides -- remember drift -- at least contains none that have been applied
intentionally. Charles Benbrook, in his excellent 2008 report "Simplifying the Pesticide Risk Equation: The
Organic Option" estimates
that organic food production would reduce our overall exposure to pesticides by
97 percent; that is, all but eliminate it.[5]
If I were of child-rearing age now, or the parent of young
children, I would make every effort to buy organic food. If I couldn't do that,
I would rely on the Environmental Working Group's guide to pesticides in produce. (Their
"Dirty Dozen" lists those fruits and vegetables with highest
pesticide residues, and their "Clean Fifteen" notes those that are
lowest.) But regardless of age, we need to stay awake, and remember that the
dangers of pesticides are as real now as they were half a century ago.
1. The word "pesticide" is used to include herbicides,
fungicides, molluscicides (these kill snails and slugs) and a host of other
"pests."Here's a definition from the E.P.A.
2. Nice piece by Margaret Atwood: "Why Rachel Carson Is a Saint."
3. Cancer, of course, is one awful risk of exposure. But there
is the very real danger of anencephaly -- a birth defect in which the baby is born
without parts of brain and/or skull -- in the children of farmworkers (both men
and women) who were exposed to pesticides, even before pregnancy.
4. In a phone interview, Charles Benbrook, a professor at
Washington State University, who is among the most articulate advocates of
reducing pesticide use, said, "By building in sufficient margins of safety
for that three-month window we are going to overprotect everyone else, which is
great."
5. And the "Stanford study," which attracted
attention for all the wrong reasons -- many reports focused on its finding of
no discernible difference in nutritive quality between organic and conventional
foods -- verified that the pesticide content of organic foods was vastly
smaller than that of conventional.
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can be sent to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-366-1637; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The
master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought
the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while
the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially
their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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