Harvard Study Links Neonicotinoid Pesticide To Colony Collapse Disorder
walterbyrd (182728) writes in with news about a new study from Harvard School of Public Health that links two widely used neonicotinoids to Colony Collapse Disorder. "Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), or the widespread population loss of honeybees, may have been caused by the use of neonicotinoids, according to a new study out of Harvard University.
Neonicotinoids are a class of pesticides, chemically similar to nicotine. They were first developed for agricultural use in the 1980's by petroleum giant Shell. The pesticides were refined by Bayer the following decade.
Two of these chemicals are now believed to be the cause of CCD, according to the new study from the School of Public Health at the university. This study replicated their own research performed in 2012."
Insect poison found to be harmful to insects. Imagine that!
has been all over the papers the past two years, almost, outside northa merkin land..
I wonder how Bayer is going to keep this new study out of their court case where they're suing the EU for banning neonicotinoid pesticides.
No sig. Move along - nothing to see here.
The company behind Zyklon B wouldn't lie!
If you were going for a joke, you failed miserably and should be ashamed.
If you weren't joking... just fucking kill yourself.
so let's suppose you say that to some random internet stranger one day. just like you did a thousand times before. only this time, the person actually does kill themselves. right after reading your post. and you find out about it. how are you supposed to feel?
sure, if they do it so easily they were on the edge anyway. but who is to say they would not have found help and hope if they never read your "recommendation"? how could you ever rule that out? in what way would you bear no guilt at all?
be careful what you wish for.
Real Farmers don't need chemicals.
You're saying the people who produce the most food aren't real farmers? Nice. But yeah, polyculture is great and all in your garden, and intercropping systems are something worthy of more research, sure, but economically scaling it up might be a problem, and even then, it is highly unlikely to be the end of pest problems. The thing with simple solutions is that if they were really that simple everyone already be doing them.
Different AC here, but I'll put it this way: if you and your ilk killed yourselves, we wouldn't have to read harping posts like the one you just posted.
The air would be fresher, the grass would smell sweeter, ice cream would taste better than it ever had before... well, you get the picture: life would be guilt-free bliss for the rest of us.
Have a nice day!