"WASHINGTON — A major pesticide harms honeybees when used on cotton and citrus but not on other big crops like corn, berries and tobacco, the Environmental Protection Agency found.
It’s the first scientific risk assessment of the much-debated class of pesticides called neonicotinoids and how they affect bees on a chronic long-term basis. The EPA found in some cases the chemical didn’t harm bees or their hives but in other cases it posed a significant risk. It mostly depended on the crop, a nuanced answer that neither clears the way for an outright ban nor is a blanket go-ahead for continued use. Both the pesticide maker and anti-pesticide advocates were unhappy with report.
The issue is important because honeybees are in trouble and they do more than make honey. They are crucial to our food supply: About one-third of the human diet comes from insect-pollinated plants, and the honeybee is responsible for 80 percent of that pollination."
Seth Borenstein reports for the Associated Press January 6, 2016.
SEE ALSO:
"Widely Used Pesticide Can Harm Bees In Some Cases -EPA" (Reuters)
"Bees Threatened By A Common Pesticide, EPA Finds" (Los Angeles Times)
"EPA: Pesticide Hurting Bees In Citrus, Cotton Plants" (Gannett)
"EPA Releases the First of Four Preliminary Risk Assessments for Insecticides Potentially Harmful to Bees" (EPA Release)
"EPA Says Pesticide Harms Bees In Some Cases"
Source: AP, 01/07/2016