General

A review of the direct and indirect effects of neonicotinoids and fipronil on vertebrate wildlife

Concerns over the role of pesticides affecting vertebrate wildlife populations have recently focussed on systemic products which exert broad-spectrum toxicity. Given that the neonicotinoids have become the fastest-growing class of insecticides globally, we review here 150 studies of their direct (toxic) and indirect (e.g. food chain) effects on vertebrate wildlife—mammals, birds, fish, amphibians and reptiles. We focus on two neonicotinoids, imidacloprid and clothianidin, and a third insecticide, fipronil, which also acts in the same systemic manner. Imidacloprid and fipronil were found to be toxic to many birds and most fish, respectively. All three insecticides exert sub-lethal effects, ranging from genotoxic and cytotoxic effects, and impaired immune function, to reduced growth and reproductive success, often at concentrations well below those associated with mortality. Use of imidacloprid and clothianidin as seed treatments on some crops poses risks to small birds, and ingestion of even a few treated seeds could cause mortality or reproductive impairment to sensitive bird species. In contrast, environmental concentrations of imidacloprid and clothianidin appear to be at levels below those which will cause mortality to freshwater vertebrates, although sub-lethal effects may occur. Some recorded environmental concentrations of fipronil, however, may be sufficiently high to harm fish. Indirect effects are rarely considered in risk assessment processes and there is a paucity of data, despite the potential to exert population-level effects. Our research revealed two field case studies of indirect effects. In one, reductions in invertebrate prey from both
imidacloprid and fipronil uses led to impaired growth in a fish species, and in another, reductions in populations in two lizard species were linked to effects of fipronil on termite prey. Evidence presented here suggests that the systemic insecticides, neonicotinoids and fipronil, are capable of exerting direct and indirect effects on terrestrial and aquatic vertebrate wildlife, thus warranting further review of their environmental safety.

Pesticide use threatens rare Hawaiian species

Given its fragile and unusually rich ecology, the Hawaiian island of Kauai seems ill-suited as a site for agricultural experiments that use heavy amounts of toxic chemicals. But four transnational corporations — BASF Plant Science, Dow AgroSciences, DuPont Pioneer, and Syngenta — have been doing just those kinds of experiments here for about two decades, extensively spraying pesticides on their GMO test fields. As a result, the landscape on the southwest corner of the island, around the town of Waimea, has become one of the most toxic chemical environments in all of American agriculture. This poses serious risks for the people of Kauai, as I’ve documented, but even less noticed are the hazards posed to the unique flora and fauna of the island and the coral reefs just off its shores. Each of the seven highly toxic pesticides most commonly used by the GMO giants on Kauai (alachlor, atrazine, chlorpyrifos, methomyl, metolachlor, paraquat, and permethrin) is known to be toxic to wildlife, plants, or both. The isolated geography of Kauai has fostered the evolution of a great diversity of birds, bugs, and plants. Kauai has more unique species — species that live only on the island — than anywhere else in the world, said Carl Berg, an ecologist and long-time advocate for clean water with the Kauai chapter of the Surfrider Foundation. Berg and others fear that these endemic species are being put at great risk of extinction by exposure to the chemicals, though he says he has no idea the extent of the damage. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service added 48 species that live only on Kauai to the endangered species list in 2010, including two different species of the Hawaiian honeycreeper, a small bird, and the large Hawaiian picture-wing fly. Also, several protected marine species rest or breed on the island’s beaches, including the highly endangered Hawaiian monk seal and the threatened green sea turtle. Occasionally, an endangered leatherback and hawksbill sea turtle will wander close in. A total of 17 different kinds of dolphins and whales frolic in the island’s harbors and bays.

The disaster I described in 2010 is taking place before our eyes. Crisis in insect biodiversity with knock-on effects for many species

Butterfly Conservation warns that Britain’s biodiversity is under threat following analysis of data from the National Moth Recording Scheme (NMRS), which has collated more than 16 million moth sightings dating back to 1769. The study by Butterfly Conservation, the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and University of York, published in the Journal of Applied Ecology, is the first to examine long-term trends for all of Britain’s resident larger moth species; common and scarce, nocturnal and day-flying. Trends for 673 species were calculated, 60% of which showed a significant change over the 40-year period. Two thirds more species declined than increased. Moths are a key part of the food chain and act as pollinators for plants. The substantial declines revealed by this study provide further evidence of a wider utterfly Conservation warns that Britain’s biodiversity is under threat following analysis of data from the National Moth Recording Scheme (NMRS), which has collated more than 16 million moth sightings dating back to 1769.

CAP greening could actually make Europe’s environment worse, according to a study by leading conservationists

Plans to make farming more environmentally friendly through reform of the CAP could actually make Europe’s environment worse, according to a study by leading conservationists. The damning report by researchers and conservation groups across Europe says environmental reforms have become so diluted during the CAP negotiations that they will have no benefit on farmland. And without individual action by member states, biodiversity would continue to decline across the continent, it says. Published in the journal Science, conservationists say rules covering to so-called “greening” of the CAP, which includes maintaining grassland, creating ecological focus areas and growing at least three crops on any farm bigger than 30ha, were so vague they were almost useless.

Die neue Gemeinsame Agrarpolitik (GAP) der Europäischen Union wird den Schutz der biologischen Vielfalt nicht verbessern, sondern sogar weiter verschlechtern

Die neue Gemeinsame Agrarpolitik (GAP) der Europäischen Union wird den Schutz der biologischen Vielfalt nicht verbessern, sondern sogar weiter verschlechtern.
Zu diesem Ergebnis kommt eine internationale Studie unter Leitung des Helmholtz-Zentrums für Umweltforschung (UFZ), die in der aktuellen Ausgabe des renommierten Wissenschaftsmagazins SCIENCE erschienen ist. Die Wissenschaftler hatten dazu die Änderungen in der Gesetzgebung analysiert sowie mit Daten des Statistischen Amtes der Europäischen Union (Eurostat) verglichen, um herauszufinden, was die reformierte Agrarpolitik tatsächlich bewirken wird. Koautoren der Studie stammen von den Universitäten Hohenheim und Freiburg sowie aus den USA, Großbritannien, der Schweiz, Ungarn, den Niederlanden, Belgien, Israel und Frankreich.

Eastern diamondback rattlers on the decline

One of the more mysterious animals in the Lowcountry is really pretty shy, long-lived, a homebody. And dreaded - the Eastern diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus). U.S. Forest Service biologists recently found diamondbacks in Francis Marion National Forest north of Charleston. They plan to attach transmitters, to learn what habitats the snakes are using and how they move and disperse. The snake is getting the close look because it's being considered as a federal threatened species. But the study joins a radio-tagging of 10 diamondbacks a few years back in the ACE Basin south of Charleston, as well as an ongoing 19-year study by South Carolina Department of Natural Resources herpetologists at the Webb Wildlife Center along the Savannah River. All three studies are aimed at figuring out how to get along with the reptile. Why in the world learn to live with a venomous animal that kills nearly half the people who are severely bitten?

Het gebruik van insecticiden in Vlaanderen wordt duur betaald met een catastrofale achteruitgang van insecten en insectivore soorten

Van de 1996 soorten op de gevalideerde Rode Lijsten, zijn 139 soorten de laatste 100 jaar uit Vlaanderen verdwenen. Van de overige geëvalueerde 1857 soorten zijn ongeveer één vierde Rode Lijstsoorten. Ze zijn sterk achteruit gegaan en/of hebben een kritisch niveau bereikt waardoor de soort op het punt staat te verdwijnen uit Vlaanderen. Uit de recente Rode Lijst van de dagvlinders in Vlaanderen blijkt dat 66 % van alle soorten dagvlinders die sinds het begin van de vorige eeuw in Vlaanderen voorkwamen in gevaar of uitgestorven zijn. In 2012 werden twee nieuwe Rode Lijsten opgesteld nl. de Rode Lijst amfibieën en reptielen en de Rode Lijst zoetwatervissen. In totaal is de helft van alle soorten amfibieën en reptielen in gevaar en/of uitgestorven. In de nieuwe Rode Lijst zoetwatervissen wordt 62 % van de zoetwatervissen in Vlaanderen als bedreigd of uitgestorven beschouwd.

Amphibians and reptiles face a profound, human-driven extinction crisis

The Center for Biological Diversity filed a formal notice of intent to sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today for failing to determine whether five increasingly rare northeastern amphibians and reptiles warrant consideration for Endangered Species Act protection. The Center first petitioned for these species — the wood turtle, spotted turtle, green salamander, Peaks of Otter salamander and white-spotted salamander — in July 2012 because habitat loss and other factors are threatening their survival. “These turtles and salamanders are irreplaceable parts of the wild where they live, whether it’s a remote mountain stream or a suburban wetland,” said Collette Adkins Giese, a Center biologist and lawyer focused on protecting amphibians and reptiles. “Losing them will impoverish those places and our own connection with the natural world.”

UK adder populations are on the slide

The unforgettable sight of dancing adders is an overlooked spring spectacular. Liam Creedon reveals why the UK’s only poisonous snake is the most misunderstood treasure of the countryside. Going in search of the UK’s only venomous snake might, on the face of it, not seem like the sharpest of ideas. But an encounter with dancing adders, as males fight each other for breeding rites, is one of spring’s most thrilling and overlooked spectacles. Despite being small, timid and uncommon, the burden of being our only remotely dangerous reptile means an aura of fear and fascination has attached itself to the adder.

Rondetafelgesprek in de gemeente Westerveld over lelieteelt en pesticiden

Omwonenden van leliepercelen in Westerveld voelen zich niet serieus genomen. Dat bleek op donderdagavond 6 maart 2014 tijdens een bijeenkomst over de lelieteelt in het gemeentehuis in Diever. Verschillende partijen konden hun standpunten toelichten over de effecten van gewasbeschermingsmiddelen. Het ging er fel aan toe in het bomvolle gemeentehuis. Omwonenden vrezen voor hun gezondheid als bollenboeren gebruik maken van middelen zoals metam-natrium om bijvoorbeeld grond te ontsmetten. De stoffen waaien uit over hun tuinen en onduidelijk is wat de effecten daarvan zijn op de volksgezondheid. Bijgevoegd een documentatie over dit thema van de hand van de toxicoloog Henk Tennekes. Naar het oordeel van Tennekes laat het Ctgb middelen toe die in de landbouw niets te zoeken hebben: het gebruik van metam-natrium verhoogt het risico op longziekten en het gebruik van imidacloprid roeit de insecten uit en daarmee ook alle soorten die van insecten afhankelijk zijn, zoals veel vogels van het boerenland. De gespreksleider in Westerveld deed pogingen de mensen met elkaar in gesprek te brengen. Tennekes, die deelnam aan de discussie, vroeg zich af waar je het in godsnaam over moet hebben als het cultuurlandschap door de boeren mag worden bezoedeld met uiterst giftige pesticiden.