"Bees, butterflies, flies and other insects in German
protected areas are contaminated with a toxic cocktail of substances that are
used in intensive agriculture. Are the chemicals the cause of insect death in
Germany?
It was almost exactly four years ago that the small
Entomological Association in Krefeld became famous overnight. At that time, the
predominantly volunteer employees succeeded in scientifically demonstrating
what until then was nothing more than a bad feeling: insects are dying in
Germany.
In a new study, in which the entomologists from Krefeld were
again involved, Carsten Brühl from the Institute for Environmental Sciences at
the University of Koblenz-Landau is now investigating the causes of the loss.
The study, which appeared in the scientific journal
Scientific Reports, supports the suspicion that has long been held that the use
of pesticides in intensive agriculture is one of the main reasons for the sharp
decline in flies and butterflies, beetles, wasps, bees and other insects in
Germany . In 2017, the entomologists from Krefeld showed that the mass of
insects had decreased by an average of 76 percent since 1989.
As then, the entomologists were once again on the move with
their "malaise traps", tent-like structures in which flying insects
get caught. The animals are then preserved in alcohol on site. For the current
study, they set up the traps from April to October 2020 in various regions of
Germany. All 21 locations examined were located in protected areas that belong
to the European Natura 2000 system of protected areas.
A neonicotinoid, which had been banned for a long time, was
also found at 16 locations
It is all the more frightening that the researchers were able
to detect a whole cocktail of pesticides in all samples. To do this, they
examined the alcohol in which they had preserved the trapped insects for 92 of
the most common substances used in agriculture. According to the study, the
pesticides discovered must come from the insects, as the alcohol is a solvent
for many chemicals that are on or in the bodies of the animals.
According to the results, the insects in the protected areas
were exposed to an average of 16 different pesticides, at one location it was even
27. In total, the researchers were able to detect 47 different substances,
including residues of the herbicides S-metolachlor and prosulfocarb. The
fungicides azoxystrobin and fluopyram were contained in samples from all
locations and the neonicotinoid thiacloprid, which is now banned throughout the
EU, in 16.
It has long been known that useful insects also come into
contact with pesticides that were actually developed to control pests. The same
applies to the realization that the toxic substances do not stay on the field
on which they are used, but spread into the environment.
Most studies on the spread of pesticides, however, focus on
residues of these substances in bodies of water. How much insects themselves
are contaminated with pesticides, however, has hardly been investigated so far
and if so, then mostly only individual substances.
"Far too little is known about the combined effects of
whole cocktails of different pesticides and their metabolites on insects,"
the scientists write. According to the authors of the study, the fact that the
toxic substances on insects could be detected in the middle of nature reserves
can be explained by the fact that all the areas examined are close to fields
that are intensively cultivated. "To this day, biodiversity-promoting
agriculture without the use of pesticides is an exception both within and on
the immediate periphery of the most valuable protected areas," write
Thomas Hörren and Martin Sorg from the Entomological Association in Krefeld in
a statement.
In the opinion of the study authors, in order to at least
reduce the pollution of nature reserves with pesticides in the future, at least
buffer zones should be set up around such areas in which the use of pesticides
is prohibited."
Since we have bureaucrats whose job it is to control the use of pesticides in Lithuania, patients with cancer can give blood samples to the laboratory. These samples could be dried out from frozen state to preserve the pesticides available in the blood. Pesticides can be extracted from the remaining dry matter with an alcoholic solution. Pesticides accumulate in the body's fatty substances, which are also present in the blood. Because pesticides destroy everything that lives, it destroys the human immune system, accelerating the development of cancer. Cancer is a very serious disease, the state must compensate patients for improper control of pesticides in food and fraudulent advertising of Lithuanian food as good for health.
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