Posted on 04/09/2010 7:48:14 PM PDT by truthfinder9
To protect our health, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sets maximum legal residue levels for every pesticide, for dozens of crops. But a new study in the respected journal Toxicology has shown that, at low levels that are currently legal on our food, Roundup could cause DNA damage, endocrine disruption and cell death. The study, conducted by French researchers, shows glyphosate-based herbicides are toxic to human reproductive cells.
The potential real-life risks from this are infertility, low sperm count, and prostate or testicular cancer. But, Symptoms could be so subtle, they would be easy to overlook, says Theo Colborn, president of The Endocrine Disruption Exchange. Timing is of critical importance. If a pregnant woman were to be exposed early in gestation, it looks like these herbicides could have an effect during the sexual differentiation stage. They really lock in on testosterone. The bottom line is more research is needed before we can fully understand the effects of glyphosate exposure.
A Perfect Poison The researchers most disturbing findings were not only the cytotoxic and hormonal responses to low-dose exposures, but the fact that the active ingredient glyphosate had much less of a toxic impact alone than the branded chemical mixtures sold to homeowners and farmers nationwide.
Solvents and surfactants, legally considered inert ingredients, are mixed with glyphosate in products such as Roundup weed killer to create chemical formulations that increase mobility and more direct access to the cells. Those same factors that aid penetration into a plant, also aid penetration into the skin, says Vincent Garry, professor emeritus of pathology at the University of Minnesota. These chemicals are designed to kill cells.
Despite being termed inert, these added (and usually secret) ingredients are anything but benign, as the manufacturers have claimed for decades. The new French research found the surfactants not only amplify the effects of glyphosate, but glyphosate also amplifies the effects of the surfactants. Basically, one plus one equals something larger than two.
Herbicide manufacturers are subject to fewer rules in the testing of inert ingredients than they are for active ingredients, explains Caroline Cox, research director at the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, Calif. The tests the EPA requires for inert ingredients cover only a small range of potential health problems, Cox says. Testing for birth defects, cancer and genetic damage are required only on the active ingredients. But were exposed to both.
Glyphosate, mostly in the form of Roundup products manufactured by the Monsanto Co., has been widely used in the United States since the 1970s. Today, we spray more than 100 million pounds on our yards and farms every year, making it the most popular of the Monsanto chemicals. Monsanto continues to assure us its product is safe. Its used to protect schools, a Monsanto spokesperson told Scientific American. Protect schools?! From what, killer weeds?
Glyphosate use has skyrocketed in recent years because of the widespread adoption of genetically modified corn, soy and cotton varieties that Monsanto developed to be resistant to glyphosate, according to the Center for Food Safety. Although the companies promoted glyphosate-resistant crops as a way to reduce herbicide use, theres actually been a sharp increase in use on corn, soybeans and cotton since 2002, thanks to the emergence of resistant weeds. Farmers are battling glyphosate-resistant weeds with more glyphosate and other herbicides.
Most of the food we eat that contains corn or soy was sprayed with glyphosate herbicide, and were being exposed to higher and higher levels of residue. In response to petitions from Monsanto, the EPA has approved up to 20-fold increases in the legal residue limits for food crops.
Our bodies are gigantic spider webs of chemical communications that work in the parts-per-trillion range, says Warren Porter, professor of zoology and environmental toxicology at the University of Wisconsin. When you put so-called insignificant amounts of toxic chemicals into the mix, you have a molecular bull in a china shop. The possibilities for impact are endless.
Better Testing Coming In response to growing public concerns, the EPA is getting ready to launch new tests on 67 potential endocrine disruptors. Critics say the proposed tests will cover only a portion of organs in the endocrine system, but supporters say it is at least a step in the right direction.
Consider the source.
mm
Makes a person wonder why so many folks live longer than they did 100 years ago...
It’s the new math.
But genetically modified foods are ok.
It is not Bushes fault it is Monsanto fault..
They stopped using Roundup in Berkely and Oakland years ago it also contributed to the fires which burned down the Oakland hills about 20 yrs ago ....
I’m not sure that I trust our corrupt, bankrupt government to insure our health, or did you support ObamaCare?
Roundup isn’t a pesticide.
In other words, give us more grant money ... we need to do more research!!!
"Most of the food we eat that contains corn or soy was sprayed with glyphosate herbicide, and were being exposed to higher and higher levels of residue."
When Round-Up Ready crops are sprayed with glyphosates, it is done in the first couple of weeks in the plant's life -- weeds are not a problem as soon as the plant attains enough size to shade the ground. The plants are literally a few inches tall, at most. By the time a plant produces a cob of corn or a bean, a couple of months has passed. I'm seriously doubting how much "residue" is actually "in" the foods that result from the corn and beans.
darn,,,we’re all gonna die /s
It kills the weeds so I don’t have to pull them.
People live longer, but get sicker when older. Socities exposed to less chemicals live longer and healthier. Chemicals work over time, if exposed to in small quantities. Really think the corporate-funded stooges in the EPA care about you 50 years from now?
Keep a bottle in the kitchen then.
Did you test it? Or are you guessing?
No.
But daily we are bombarded with “studies” that contradict each other. The only conclusion is that more “studies” ($$$$) are needed. Science has become a tool of all sides for profit (boy, I'm starting to sound like a socialist!!)
So maybe instead of taking an extreme view of “no chemicals” or the other extreme “they’re all good for us” perhaps we should all be a little more reasonable.
You're less likely to get sicker during your old age if you don't have an old age...
No hiho, the scientists who are after our tax dollars, and the government that gives our tax dollars to them, are the socialists.
As a capitalist, I say that the private "for profit" sector should fund relevant research in a competitive environment. Uncle Sugar's teat needs to run dry.
Roundup is just salt.
Harmless.
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