New Study Confirms GMO Crops Causing More Pesticide Use, Superweeds
Lisa Garber
Activist PostGenetically modified organisms (GMOs) require more pesticide use on crops, say the authors of a 16-year
study published in Environmental Sciences Europe. According to the
researchers, 527 million pounds of a toxic herbicide have inundated
farmlands since 1996.
What’s more, this abhorrent amount is much greater than that promised by
Monsanto, which claims that GM crops require smaller doses of
herbicides like the company’s best-selling Roundup Ready.
This study found, however, that although farmers did reduce Roundup
Ready use by 2 percent between 1996 and 1999, herbicide use resurged
with a vengeance thereafter. This was a result of the emergence of
“superweeds” that resist herbicides, requiring farmers to use more of it
with each application.
Herbicide and Pesticide Use Damage Humans, EnvironmentThese “superweeds” have become resistant to glyphosate, a chemical found in Roundup Ready. Rootworms, too, may be
becoming resistant according to ongoing research by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Additionally, a recent French
study by the University of Caen found glyphosate and herbicides like Roundup
to be actively toxic to human cells—findings which led to
Russia’s suspension of Monsanto crop imports.
Earth Open Source, a nonprofit organization with volunteers as well as
several international scientists and researchers, has linked glyphosate
with birth defects. Worse (but predictable) is that in 1993 Monsanto
knew “visceral anomalies such as dilation of the heart could occur in
rabbits at low and medium-sized doses,” but did nothing to curb the
chemical’s or Roundup’s use in agriculture.
Glyphosate also causes
moderate to severe liver damage in fish and aquatic life, since herbicide runoff can reach both groundwater and seawater. This
water pollution has been found to affect even city dwellers, in whose urine researchers have found
glyphosate.
Farm Bill to Deregulate GMOsMeanwhile, there is a provision lurking in the new Farm Bill which would
further deregulate genetically modified (GM) foods in America. Monsanto
has spent millions (over six, in fact) of dollars winning friends in
Washington, DC. With the Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) already deep in Monsanto’s pockets, we can
only hope members of Congress take note of these studies and of recent
anti-GMO activity in Europe and Russia.
Source:-
http://www.activistpost.com/2012/10/new-study-confirms-gmo-crops-causing.html