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  • 17
    Aug
    2012
    1:26pm, EDT

    Is spraying for West Nile virus safe?

    With nearly 700 reported cases of West Nile virus nationwide, health officials say this is the worst season for West Nile in eight years, and ground zero for infections is Texas. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports.

    By Maggie Fox, Senior Writer, NBC News

    Texas state health officials, alarmed by the worst outbreak of West Nile virus since the infection first hit the United States in 1999, started spraying insecticide from airplanes Thursday night.

    Years of research show the poisons being used in the spray are safe for humans — and certainly safer than the virus, health officials said. But blogs and social media lit up with concerned comments from people afraid the insecticide might hurt them, their children or other creatures in the environment. 

    “This is not science. It is ignorance, fueled by chemical corporations seizing the opportunity to poison everyone,” Judith Winchester, a Dallas-area designer, posted on the North Texas Poison Center 's Facebook page.

    The poison center and state health officials, as well as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmental Protection Agency, say the spray being used is about as safe as an insecticide can be. Called Duet, it’s made up of two products, both synthetic versions of a chemical made by chrysanthemum flowers.

    AP Photo/courtesy the Northwestern Mosquito Abatement District

    Culex pipiens, left, is the primary mosquito that can transmit West Nile virus to humans, birds and other animals. The bite of this mosquito is very gentle and usually unnoticed by people. At right is an Aedes vexans. It is a very aggressive biting mosquito but not an important transmitter of disease.

    “Risks with aerial spraying are very, very low, especially compared with the risk of disease,” said Carrie Williams, a spokeswoman for the Texas State Department of Health Services. “We believe it is a safe and very effective approach for Dallas.”

    Insecticides first got a bad name back in the 1960s, when it became clear that DDT was killing birds by thinning their eggshells. Then it turned out it was a likely cause of human cancer, too, and it was banned in the U.S. in 1972.  And because so many insecticides are nerve agents, they have worried doctors, environmentalists and the public. There’s one class of pesticides called organophosphates that do appear to damage the nervous systems of people who get exposed to high amounts — farm workers, for example.

    But the pyrethrins in Duet — that’s their chemical name – are formulated differently and work through a different mechanism. They kill mosquitos in very low doses. And they don’t affect mammals, humans included, in the same way they affect insects.

    According to the National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC), a joint venture between Oregon State University and the EPA, pyrethrins work by blocking the nerve activity of insects and they kill adult mosquitos by direct contact. But they’re not as dangerous to bigger creatures, even birds.

    “Pyrethrins are one of the least poisonous insecticides to mammals," the center says on its website. They break down quickly into inactive forms in the body and don’t build up in the soil. They do, however, kill honeybees and can poison fish and other aquatic life. That’s one reason that Texas is spraying at night – to minimize the effects on bees, butterflies and other beneficial insects.

    They are used in pet flea and tick preparations and in lice control shampoo for humans. The EPA says they don’t cause cancer and don’t hurt pregnant women or their unborn babies.

    Compare this to West Nile, which has made 30,000 Americans sick since it arrived in the New York City borough of Queens in 1999. “The 693 cases reported thus far in 2012 is the highest number of West Nile virus disease cases reported to CDC through the second week in August since West Nile virus was first detected in the United States in 1999,” the CDC says.

    “Over 80 percent of the cases have been reported from six states (Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and California) and almost half of all cases have been reported from Texas.”

    West Nile itself isn’t especially deadly — only about 20 percent of infected people even know they have something, other than perhaps a mild cold. And most who develop symptoms get what’s called West Nile fever, which has the typical symptoms of many viruses — fever, headache, tiredness and, sometimes, a rash.

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    But 1 percent of cases get severe disease, usually meningitis, an inflammation of the spinal cord, or encephalitis, which is inflammation of the brain. These are usually older people are patients with suppressed immune systems. These symptoms can kill quickly or leave people with nerve damage such as paralyzed limbs.

    There is no human vaccine for West Nile — there’s one for horses — and no real treatment. People with severe infections get supportive care such as IV fluids to make sure they don’t die of dehydration and breathing support if the nerve damage affects their ability to breathe.

    The other chemical used as a defense against West Nile is DEET, an ingredient in the most effective insect repellents. It seems to stop mosquitoes from smelling their human victims. The NPIC says it’s very safe for people. “Nearly all of the DEET that is taken in through the skin is eliminated by the body within 24 hours of applying it,” the center’s website says. It also does not cause cancer and has been used safely by pregnant women.

    Williams says the state health department is trying to address fears. “People have kids, they have pets,and we completely understand that people may be feeling apprehensive about this,” she says. “We have relied on the science to help us make the decision.”

    And the department says spraying is only part of the answer to the problem. People need to cover up, use insecticide and,most of all, control standing water to stop mosquitoes from breeding. Even a small amount of water in a potted plant can provide a breeding ground for mosquitoes.

    Related links:

    • Texas sprayed as West Nile virus spreads
    • Tenth West Nile death confirmed in Dallas
    • West Nile virus on the rise

     

    157 comments

    I'd rather take my chances with West Nile than that crap.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, west-nile, featured, ddt, mosquitoes, insecticide, deet
  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    2:01pm, EDT

    Neonicotinoid pesticides tied to crashing bee populations, 2 studies find

    AAAS / Science

    A bee with a transmitter glued to its back was one of the specimens in a study that used the radio technology to track what happened to bee colonies exposed to a widely used pesticide.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    A widely used farm pesticide first introduced in the 1990s has caused significant changes to bee colonies and removing it could be the key factor in restoring nature's army of pollinators, according to two studies released Thursday.


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    The scientists behind the studies in Europe called for regulators to consider banning the class of chemicals known as neonicotinoid insecticides. In the U.S., the Environmental Protection Agency told msnbc.com that the studies would be incorporated into a review that's currently under way.

    A pesticide trade group questioned the data, saying the levels of pesticide used were unrealistically high, while the researchers said the levels used were typical of what bees would find on farms.


    "Our study raises important issues regarding pesticide authorization procedures," stated Mikael Henry, co-author of a study on honey bees. "So far, they mostly require manufacturers to ensure that doses encountered on the field do not kill bees, but they basically ignore the consequences of doses that do not kill them but may cause behavioral difficulties."

    "There is an urgent need to develop alternatives to the widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides on flowering crops wherever possible," added the authors of the second study on bumble bees.

    Last week, a coalition of environmental groups and beekeepers asked the EPA to suspend the use of the pesticide, which is widely used in flowering crops like corn, sunflower and cotton to combat insects.

    The studies are the first to go outside the lab and into the fields, where the experts said they detected how the pesticide impacts bees as they collect pollen and pollinate flowers and crops.

    Honey bee populations have been crashing around the world in recent years, and pesticides have been suspected, along with other potential factors such as parasites, disease and habitat loss, in what's known as Colony Collapse Disorder. In the U.S., some beekeepers in 2006 began reporting losses of 30-90 percent of their hives, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    Combating Colony Collapse Disorder is hardly an esoteric exercise. The USDA notes that "bee pollination is responsible for $15 billion in added crop value, particularly for specialty crops such as almonds and other nuts, berries, fruits, and vegetables.

    "About one mouthful in three in the diet directly or indirectly benefits from honey bee pollination," it adds.

    Published in the peer-reviewed journal Science, one study by British scientists looked at honey bees and the other by French scientists examined bumble bees, which unlike honey bees live in the wild but also are key pollinators.

    In the bumble bee study, researchers concluded that colonies treated with nonlethal levels of the pesticide "had a significantly reduced growth rate and suffered an 85% reduction in production of new queens" compared to colonies without the pesticide.

    "It was quite massive," researcher Penelope Whitehorn said of the reduction at a press conference Thursday. (Click here for audio of the news conference.)

    "Bumble bees have an annual life cycle and it is only new queens that survive the winter to found colonies in the spring," the authors noted. "Our results suggest that trace levels of neonicotinoid pesticides can have strong negative consequence for queen production by bumble bee colonies under realistic field conditions, and this is likely to have a substantial population-level impact."

    In the honey bee study, radio transmitters were attached to the back of bees to see how they foraged in conditions with and without the pesticide.

    The pesticide, the researchers concluded, impaired the homing ability of bees and exposed bees were two to three times more likely to die while away from the hive. That "high mortality ... could put a colony at risk of collapse" within a few weeks of exposure, especially in combination with other stressors, they noted.

    "We were actually quite surprised by the magnitude," Henry told reporters.

    CropLife America, a pesticides trade group, said in a statement that the studies "fail to account for the many real-world factors that impact bee and colony health, and the researchers used unrealistic pesticide dose levels that are not commonly found in practical field situations in agriculture." 

    Dave Goulson, a University of Stirling researcher with the bumble bee study, countered that the scientific papers "are the closest studies to date to look at the real world situation."

    A leading U.S. researcher said the honey bee study "did use a higher dose than we have seen in pollen and nectar."

    That study is "not fatally flawed," added Jeff Pettis of the USDA's Bee Research Laboratory, "but the higher dose must be considered as being a factor in why they saw the loss of bees."

    "The bumble bee study, however, used a very realistic dose and the effect on reproduction was the major finding," he told msnbc.com. "The bumble bee study was very convincing in my opinion in being realistic and showing a significant impact on reproduction."

    CropLife America spokeswoman Mary Emma Young said the dose in the bumble bee study was "a high level, but not as excessive" as in the honey bee study, and that "similar studies on bumble bees did not show these effects, so more research may be needed."

    In the honey bee study, the authors said they tested the bees at an "intensive cereal farming system" in France and used sublethal amounts of thiamethoxam, "a recently marketed neonicotinoid substance currently being authorized in an increasing number of countries worldwide for the protection of oilseed rape, maize and other blooming crops foraged by honey bees."

    Goulson noted that EPA rules don't require pesticide makers to test the product as bees navigate over natural distances and yet that "is where the problems seem to start."

    The EPA, contacted by msnbc.com, said it has "begun reviewing the two studies ... and they will be considered" as part of an ongoing process that reviews chemicals. Non-EPA scientists will weigh in at a special meeting in the fall, it added.

    The prevailing view among most scientists and regulators is that "complex interactions among multiple stressors" are to blame, the EPA stated.  "While our understanding of the potential role of pesticides in pollinator health declines is still progressing, we continue to seek to learn what regulatory changes, if any, may be effective."

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    456 comments

    Hopefully they definitively find a cause soon. Honeybees are very important.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, bees, insecticide, colony-collapse-disorder, neonicotinoid

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Maggie Fox, Senior Writer, NBC News

Senior health writer for NBCNews.com. With 20 years experience reporting on health, science, medicine and technology, Maggie now specializes in writing health stories that the average reader can understand. Former global health and science editor, Reuters, who established an award-winning and agenda-setting science and health file for the news agency.

Miguel Llanos

I'm the environment and weather editor for msnbc.com, and hope to discuss issues and events with the newsvine community as well as to invite experts into those discussions.

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