Protect bees in your backyard & beyond

Protect bees in your backyard & beyond

Pledge to protect bees in your backyard, and put your honey bee haven on the map! Take action »

Corporate bullying revealed

Corporate bullying revealed

Syngenta's multi-million dollar campaign to protect atrazine by intimidating scientists, spinning media & blocking legal action. Learn more »

Pesticides in our bodies

Pesticides in our bodies

Even in tiny doses, many chemicals can derail the delicate systems that control our development, health and reproduction. Learn more »

Let's get food & farming back on track

Let's get food & farming back on track

We need a 2013 Farm Bill that's good for farmers, communities and our future. Learn more»

EPA, step up for bees!

EPA, step up for bees!

The European Union just voted to stop using bee-harming pesticides. Tell EPA it's time to follow the science and protect bees.
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Debunking GE myths

Debunking GE myths

Dr. Marcia Ishii-Eiteman separates science from myth about genetically engineered crops. Read More »

Marcia Ishii-Eiteman's picture

My kids had a great baseball season playing in Little League this Spring. We've now moved on to other summery things like swim lessons in Berkeley's freezing fog. So I was caught off-guard by last week's surprise collision between my work and home worlds, namely the revelation that USDA has just given Scotts Miracle Gro (the lawn chemical company and much decried sponsor of Major League Baseball), the go-ahead for a new and once again totally unnecessary genetically engineered product: Roundup Ready lawn grass. And they may have pulled off a de facto deregulation of all future GE products in the process.

Kathryn Gilje's picture

In some circles, it would be called a bribe, at best. Evidence revealed last week shows that Monsanto's former Chief Financial Officer admitted that the agrichemical corporation planned to spend $150 million in cash and trade incentives in Latin America, North America and Europe to spur the uptake of the pesticide glyphosate, better known as RoundUp. $150 million is no small change — and surely that's not all that's been spent.

The news came to light last week as part of an investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Sadly, small farmers around the world know all too well the carrot and stick approaches that Monsanto and other pesticide giants use to lure farmers (and nations) toward industrial agriculture and onto the pesticide treadmill.

Margaret Reeves's picture

While there are hundreds of species of earthworms, anyone who makes compost knows the redworm, or Eisenia fetida. They make what's considered perhaps the richest form of natural fertilizer — a true friend to farmers and gardeners alike.

What you might not know is that very low levels of pesticides can kill these "black gold" producers. If they don't kill outright, pesticides can cause other serious harm, like reducing worms' ability to reproduce. Exposure to the neonicitinoid pesticide imidacloprid — well-known for its toxicity to honeybees — can also cause serious harm to worms, damaging DNA and deforming sperm. Bad news.

Kristin Schafer's picture

My grandfather's Parkinson's was pretty far along by the time I knew him. I remember as a 4-year-old straining to understand his tremoring voice which — when combined with his thick Swedish accent — was almost impossible for me and my sister to understand. Even as a small child, I could tell it broke his heart.

In a study released last week, researchers explain exactly how pesticides can interact with the brain to trigger this incurable disease. Their findings may help prevent and treat Parkinson's for future generations.

Amy Fontenot's picture

I have never been an organizer.  Tell me where the march is, and I’ll show up if I can.   

But several months ago I got an e-mail forward from Graham White, a beekeeper in Scotland. It said something to the effect of: “Hey beekeepers, picture this: a flash mob for the bees!”