Pesticide ban to save French bees


This video is called Honey Bees – Life Cycle.

From Wildlife Extra:

France to ban oilseed pesticide to protect bees

A more precautionary path must be found so that our wild bumblebees, butterflies, moths and hoverflies can pollinate flowers safely

More evidence to the danger from evaluate neonicotinoid pesticides

June 2012. French Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll has outlined plans to ban Cruiser OSR, a neonicotinoid pesticide, and has officially asked the EU Commission to re-evaluate neonicotinoid pesticides to increase protection for bees.

Used on oilseed rape

Cruiser OSR is a pesticide containing the neonicotinoid thiamethoxam and is used as a seed coating in oilseed rape crops. This product is available for commercial use in the UK. A recent study by Mickael Henry from the French National Institute for Agricultural Research (Inra) in Avignon, found that thiamethoxam affects the foraging ability of bees.

Matt Shardlow, Buglife Chief Executive Officer, said “France has reacted quickly and properly to new evidence that a pesticide is likely to damage bees. In contrast the UK Government’s head is in the sand on the neonicotinoid pesticides issue, preferring to defer decision making until they are presented with a hypothetical – but virtually unachievable – level of scientific proof. This is a policy that protects the pesticide industry but does not protect the public and the environment. A more precautionary path must be found so that our wild bumblebees, butterflies, moths and hoverflies can pollinate flowers safely”.

85% reduction in the number of queen bees

A second pesticide product widely used on UK oilseed rape contains the neonicotinoid chemical imidacloprid. A scientific study carried out by Dr Penelope Whitehorn, Stirling University, found that when bumblebee nests and their queens were exposed to imidacloprid at levels present in the UK countryside they grew more slowly and the nest had 85% reduction in the number of queens produced.

Vicky Kindemba, Buglife Conservation Manager said “Oilseed rape with its prominent yellow fields is a crop that dominates our countryside but it could also be poisoning our pollinators. British Government needs to pay attention to the ban and take urgent action to protect our important pollinators from these dangerous pesticides”.

Neonicotinoid pesticides

Neonicotinoids are systemic chemicals; when applied to seeds they spread through the plant and are found in the plant’s pollen and nectar. Neonicotinoid pesticides are applied as seed treatments to flowering crops such as oilseed rape to protect oilseed from insect pests.

See also here.

The British position contrasts sharply with that of France, which in June banned one of the pesticides, thiamethoxam, made by the Swiss chemicals giant Syngenta. French scientists said it was impairing the abilities of honey-bees to find their way back to their nests. The Green MP Caroline Lucas described the British attitude as one of “astonishing complacency”: here.

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