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Center for Biological Diversity: Pesticides Reduction Environmental Health |
GROUPS SUE EPA FOR
APPROVING INSECTICIDE
DESPITE THREAT TO
ENDANGERED SPECIES
APPROVING INSECTICIDE
DESPITE THREAT TO
ENDANGERED SPECIES
Groups sue EPA for approving insecticide despite threat
to endangered species
By Kelly House
By Kelly House
Conservationists who argue a newly approved insecticide is a
known killer of bees and other pollinators plan to sue the
federal government for letting it go to market.
The groups, including West Linn-based Defenders of Wildlife,
the Center for Biological Diversity and the Center for Food
Safety, notified the Environmental Protection Agency on
Monday of their intent to sue over flupyradifurone, a
compound manufactured by Bayer CropScience.
The plaintiffs allege EPA regulators disobeyed federal rules
requiring them to consult with federal wildlife agencies before
approving a substance known to kill endangered animals.
Flupyradifurone is part of a growing class of insecticides
engineered to seep into a plant's system, rather than
simply coating the outside. These so-called systemic
insecticides include neonicotinoids, chemicals that have
been implicated for playing a role in mass bee die-offs
in Oregon and other states.
The Oregon Department of Agriculture this month banned
the use four types of neonicotinoids on linden trees after
identifying the chemicals as culprits in a series of mass
bee die-offs in recent months. An agency spokeswoman
said ODA is looking to the federal government for further
guidance on pesticide regulations.
The EPA announced its decision to approve
flupyradifurone Jan. 21 with a press release
promoting the chemical as "safer for bees."
"Laboratory-based studies indicate that the compound
is practically non-toxic to adult honeybees," the release
stated. "Studies show no adverse effect on overall
bee colony performance."
The plaintiffs disagree with that characterization.
EPA researchers concluded the compound was
safer for colonies because it kills individual bees
on site, preventing them from carrying the chemical
back to the hive where it could sicken other bees.
"Having the bees drop dead in the field rather than
poisoning their whole hive is not something you want
to write home about," said Lori Ann Burd, a Portland-based
environmental health director for the Center for
Biological Diversity.
Plus, Bird said, the EPA's statements about colony
safety fail to account for the thousands of solitary bee
species that don't live in hives.
The label accompanying containers of flupyradifurone
acknowledges the substance "may have effects on
endangered species." Plaintiffs say because of that,
the agency was legally obligated to consult with
federal wildlife agencies before approving the insecticide. It didn't.
"EPA cannot absolve its responsibilities to comply
with the Endangered Species Act merely by
acknowledging the harm to endangered species
that exposure to Flupyradifurone will cause,"
the group told EPA administrator Gina McCarthy
in a letter notifying her of their plans to sue.
The EPA has 60 days to respond, or the matter
goes to court.
© 2015 Oregon Live LLC.
This article originally appeared here.
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