Mary Purcell-Miramontes USDA-National Institute of Food
Transcription
Mary Purcell-Miramontes USDA-National Institute of Food
Mary Purcell-Miramontes USDA-National Institute of Food & Agriculture Washington DC USA [email protected] 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Research informing pesticide policy Education (e.g., pesticide safety training) Extend knowledge to end usersdisseminate information via university cooperative extension Coordinate activities with stakeholders, universities & government agencies Brief legislators, policy makers on key issues (when summoned) Decisions on what products need to be monitored (e.g., soil, air, water) Changes in label guidelines (e.g., when, where, how to apply) Best management practices Restrictions on use Discontinuing use Regulatory agencies depend on researchers to perform studies to evaluate pesticide impacts. ◦ Hypothesis-driven ◦ Well replicated ◦ Appropriately designed ◦ Predictive value However, unexpected things happen…. Leading to new research studies informing policy makers and potentially more changes in policy Seed treatments and neonicitinoids Synergistic effects between chemicals Sub-lethal effects of chemicals Inert chemicals and adjuvants Krupke et al., 2012, PLoS ONE Dust produced when planting pesticidecoated corn seeds contained high levels of 2 neonicitinoid pesticides (0.3 to 1.5% clothianidin or thiamethoxam High bee kills observed Chemical companies developing new lubricants reduce drift Corn Dust Research Consortium developed http://pollinator.org/CDRC.htm ◦ 3 grants funded to Ohio State, Iowa State and Ontario Acaricides, fungicides and antimicrobials Not toxic alone, but in combination, acute effects observed Johnson et al. 2013 PLoS One Bees frequently exposed to gamut of pesticides, most occur at sub-lethal dosages Mullin et al. 2010 PloS One Exposure of bee larvae to sublethal doses of imidacloprid associated with increased infection by Nosema, a gut pathogen of honey bees Pettis et al. 2012 Naturwissenschaften Some are acutely toxic Zhu et al. 2013 PLoS One Others have sub-lethal effects (e.g., learning) ◦ Ciarlo et al. 2012 PLoS One This is where the bit about “a heck of a lot of discussion” applies… USDA helped coordinate meetings with EPA, chemical companies and scientists to discuss future testing methodology (e.g., SEATAC 2011) Constraints ◦ Testing combinations of chemicals and interactions adds new layers of complexity and costs of studies Best management practices: ◦ Bee CAP (Research driven) ◦ Bee Informed Partnership CAP (stakeholder driven) ◦ Pesticide Safety Education Program: Certifies pesticide applicators ◦ eXtension Bee Health Community of Practice ◦ USDA/EPA coordinating with regional IPM centers to integrate crop IPM with BMPs for bees) 4. Coordination Honey bee Health Stakeholder Conference ◦ State of knowledge ◦ Identified Future needs: 1. Field studies using fieldlevel concentrations Evaluate effects on hive strength, foraging and pollination 2. Establish centralized source of information for Best Management Practices CCD and Honey Bee Health Steering Committee – New Action Plan (Winter 2014) Targeted pesticide research –ARS labs Grant funding for research, extension and education (e.g., AFRI, SCRI, regional IPM, e-IPM) Meet with IPM centers, PSEP coordinators about centralizing Best Management Practices Information Baton Rouge: Field exposure in cotton to neonicitinoids, toxic effects, immune response in honey bee Tucson: Effects of fungicides and other pesticides on honey bee development Logan UT: Immune response of alfalfa leafcutter bees to neonics. Beltsville: Pesticides effects on queen and worker physiology Dave Epstein and Sheryl Kunickis (USDAOPMP) Tom Moriarity, Tom Steeger, Don Brady (EPA) Kevin Hackett, Jeff Pettis (USDA-ARS) Robyn Rose (USDA-APHIS) Doug Holy USDA-NRCS Skip Hyberg USDA-FSA