Posted on 12/30/2015 3:47:03 PM PST by presidio9
During these hectic weeks between Thanksgiving and New Yearâs Day, many of us think a lot not only about family, but about food. As we gather around tables to talk, so many of our holiday rituals centers around eating: cranberry sauce at Thanksgiving, applesauce for Chanukah latkes, honey-glazed ham for Christmas and â especially in the South â black-eyed peas and greens for good luck on New Yearâs Day. Kwanzaa literally translates to âfirst fruits.â
Yet many of these holiday favorites are endangered, because the bees they depend upon are dying by the millions.
You may have heard about this crisis years ago and filed it away in your mind as probably another hysterical overreaction by environmentalists.
Not so. The threat is real and present. We all know bees make honey, and are therefore critical to the honey-baked ham and baklava that many of us have recently been enjoying. What everyone may not know is that in the process of making honey, bees pollinate more than 70% of the worldâs most common crops, from fruits and nuts to the alfalfa eaten by dairy cows.
All told, bees are responsible for one in three forkfuls of the foods we love , from pumpkin pie and cheesecake to collards and Brussels sprouts; from chocolate and coffee to apples and strawberries. And here in New York, bees pollinate more than $300 million worth of crops such as apples, grapes and pumpkins.
But across the world, bees are dying at unprecedented rates, and beekeepers, farmers and scientists are sounding the alarm. U.S. bee populations have reached historic lows, and weâre losing nearly a third of our bee colonies each year â a rate that more than triples what was once considered normal.
Scientists point to a complex web of factors, including climate change and habitat destruction, to explain the massive collapse of colonies here and across the world.
But a certain class of insecticides, used on three-quarters of U.S. farms each year â and on about 140 different crops, including corn, canola and soy â has emerged as a clear culprit in the dieoff.
Sharing the same chemical properties as nicotine, neonicotinoids are neurotoxins that can kill bees off directly. These chemicals can also disorient bees and make it harder for them to pollinate and get back to their hives.
We need more bees
The insecticides may actually be addictive to bees, just like nicotine in tobacco is addictive to humans. Bees have been shown to actually prefer food sources treated with these pesticides to natural alternatives like sugar water.
Numerous lab studies have shown that these pesticides are a danger to bees, and last month the journal Nature published the first study to establish a direct causal link between neonic exposure and beesâ ability to do their job as pollinators.
By one estimate, these chemicals are 6,000 times more toxic to bees than DDT, which was banned in the United States in the 1970s over concerns that the common pesticide was poisoning wildlife and the environment, and endangering human health.
Based on this mounting science indicating the danger of neonics, the European Union has already banned the three most widely used neonicotinoids.
Thereâs been no equivalently bold action here, as pesticide manufacturers have managed to derail regulatory efforts.
The fact that our government is failing doesnât mean the rest of us are powerless.
Major garden retailers like Loweâs and Home Depot are already beginning to phase out the sales of neonics and plants treated with them. Some grocers like Whole Foods are beginning to label appropriate foods âbee friendly.â And some U.S. cities and states are limiting the use of neonicotinoids.
As consumers, we can plant gardens full of native, flowering herbs and vegetables, and decline to use bee-killing pesticides. As chefs, we can use produce grown on bee-friendly farms and use our menus to educate customers.
As citizens, we can and must pressure our leaders to get far, far tougher on a chemical that is imperiling the very future of an insect that is vital to the food we eat.
You realize that all plants contain pesticides naturally?
Otherwise they never would have survived.
How does this work. Do you buy them from a distributor?
Trust me, I know. I just had a two deal back and forth what a nutjob who called me an a..hole for telling him to RTFT before posting next time.
As for me, I like to hear both sides of the argument from conservative critical thinkers. I think we have a fair representation here, so I'm ok with this thread.
100%
Journal of American Science 2012;8(9) http://www.jofamericanscience.org
1122
Conclusion
The results of this study showed several changes in organs/body weight and serum biochemistry in the rats fed on GM corn. These findings indicate potential adverse health/toxic effects of GM corn and further investigations still needed.
After all, every major grain, fruit and vegetable crop has been extensively hybridized -- and hybridization is simply a form of genetic modification.
As far as I am concerned, Monarch numbers have dropped for two reasons:
First, and most significantly, the deforestation of the wintering sites in Mexico.
And second, the removal a milkweed from the landscape, which is indeed a byproduct of GMO farmers ability to aggressively spray their crops a couple of time a season. Butterfly larve can only feed on Milkweed, and for that reason females will either find one to lay their eggs on or die trying.
The correct response to the second should be encouraging people to plant more ornamental milkweed in their gardens, and this has been happening over the past few years.
They tend to nest individually so you should make a special nesting block for them.
They work at colder temperatures then the honey bees do and are docile by nature.
Including, as someone mentioned here earlier, the tobacco plant, who's natural pesticide is in fact nicotine.
A truly conservative critical thinkers insist on informed consent for knowing whatâs in our food and if itâs safe and efficiently produced in the LONG run.
You want this stuff, go buy organic. We don’t need more govt regulation.
STOP COMPLAINING WITH YOUR MOUTH FULL. We live in a time of tremendous choice and availability of food. Has never happened in history before.
Just because you are against something is no reason to use force of law to make us pay for what you want.
A TRUE CONSERVATIVE WILL LOOK TO THE MARKET, NOT THE GOVERNEMTN. Vote with your dollars and buy organic.
Or don't. Humans have been genetically modifying crops for as long as there has been such a thing as agriculture.
It is surprising how many plants we cultivate and eat are poisonous in the right amounts.
The castor bean produces one of the deadliest poisons known to man. But some part of virtually every plant is poisonous. They’ve been at this game a lot longer than we have. By most estimates, only 5 to 10 percent of all plants are edible in any way edible by humans.
They will reproduce, they just will not have the same characteristics as their parent plant.
Take the seed from a Hass Avocado and plant it. You will get an avocado tree but not a Hass Avocado. All Hass Avocado are grafted. The original grafts came from a sport tree that has never reproduced naturally.
Plants are funny things.
“Ive been feeding butterflies for decades with the Buddleia bush (Butterfly bush) and similar butterfly-attracting flowers. “
Monarchs can sip nectar from Buddleia but their caterpillars cannot feed on it. Asclepia milkweed is the food source for their caterpillars, plant some and you’ll do them a favor.
Dill weed works, too.
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