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April 2008, Week 1

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From:
Arthur Mudge <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Arthur Mudge <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 2 Apr 2008 10:15:27 -0400
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REPLY:  Thanks, Peter.  I had read the article, and while appreciating its 
point, was disappointed that it did not give more attention to addressing 
the problem on the supply as well as demand side, by using our trade 
leverage to require production to be environmentally "cleaner" for our fruit 
and vegetable imports.
    As one who lived and worked in Latin America for many years I did not 
appreciate singling out Latin America for boycott relative to a problem 
which is worldwide in scope, and largely a product of ignorance.
    The article's mention of Barn Swallows really struck home.  I have 
observed a severe decline in the Upper Valley of this most graceful of all 
fliers.
    Regards,
    Art

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Sandy Stettenheim" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2008 8:39 PM
Subject: [UVB] Fw: Did Your Shopping List Kill a Songbird?


for your consideration -

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Peter Stettenheim
To: [log in to unmask] ; [log in to unmask] ; [log in to unmask] ; 
[log in to unmask]
Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2008 9:00 AM
Subject: Did Your Shopping List Kill a Songbird?


Here's an editorial by Bridget Stutchbury from a recent New York Times about 
the choice of food and other consumer items. The author, an ornithologist 
friend, is a professor of biology at York University in Canada.


   Did Your Shopping List Kill a Songbird?

  By BRIDGET STUTCHBURY

  Woodbridge, Ontario

  THOUGH a consumer may not be able to tell the difference, a striking red 
and blue Thomas the Tank Engine made in Wisconsin is not the same as one 
manufactured in China - the paint on the Chinese twin may contain dangerous 
levels of lead. In the same way, a plump red tomato from Florida is often 
not the same as one grown in Mexico. The imported fruits and vegetables 
found in our shopping carts in winter and early spring are grown with types 
and amounts of pesticides that would often be illegal in the United States.

  In this case, the victims are North American songbirds. Bobolinks, called 
skunk blackbirds in some places, were once a common sight in the Eastern 
United States. In mating season, the male in his handsome tuxedo-like suit 
sings deliriously as he whirrs madly over the hayfields. Bobolink numbers 
have plummeted almost 50 percent in the last four decades, according to the 
North American Breeding Bird Survey.

  The birds are being poisoned on their wintering grounds by highly toxic 
pesticides. Rosalind Renfrew, a biologist at the Vermont Center for 
Ecostudies, captured bobolinks feeding in rice fields in Bolivia and took 
samples of their blood to test for pesticide exposure. She found that about 
half of the birds had drastically reduced levels of cholinesterase, an 
enzyme that affects brain and nerve cells - a sign of exposure to toxic 
chemicals.

  Since the 1980s, pesticide use has increased fivefold in Latin America as 
countries have expanded their production of nontraditional crops to fuel the 
demand for fresh produce during winter in North America and Europe. Rice 
farmers in the region use monocrotophos, methamidophos and carbofuran, all 
agricultural chemicals that are rated Class I toxins by the World Health 
Organization, are highly toxic to birds, and are either restricted or banned 
in the United States. In countries like Guatemala, Honduras and Ecuador, 
researchers have found that farmers spray their crops heavily and repeatedly 
with a chemical cocktail of dangerous pesticides.

  In the mid-1990s, American biologists used satellite tracking to follow 
Swainson's hawks to their wintering grounds in Argentina, where thousands of 
them were found dead from monocrotophos poisoning. Migratory songbirds like 
bobolinks, barn swallows and Eastern kingbirds are suffering mysterious 
population declines, and pesticides may well be to blame. A single 
application of a highly toxic pesticide to a field can kill seven to 25 
songbirds per acre. About half the birds that researchers capture after such 
spraying are found to suffer from severely depressed neurological function.

  Migratory birds, modern-day canaries in the coal mine, reveal an 
environmental problem hidden to consumers. Testing by the United States Food 
and Drug Administration shows that fruits and vegetables imported from Latin 
America are three times as likely to violate Environmental Protection Agency 
standards for pesticide residues as the same foods grown in the United 
States. Some but not all pesticide residues can be removed by washing or 
peeling produce, but tests by the Centers for Disease Control show that most 
Americans carry traces of pesticides in their blood. American consumers can 
discourage this poisoning by avoiding foods that are bad for the 
environment, bad for farmers in Latin America and, in the worst cases, bad 
for their own families.

  What should you put on your bird-friendly grocery list? Organic coffee, 
for one thing. Most mass-produced coffee is grown in open fields heavily 
treated with fertilizers, herbicides, fungicides and insecticides. In 
contrast, traditional small coffee farmers grow their beans under a canopy 
of tropical trees, which provide shade and essential nitrogen, and fertilize 
their soil naturally with leaf litter. Their organic, fair-trade coffee is 
now available in many coffee shops and supermarkets, and it is recommended 
by the Audubon Society, the American Bird Conservancy and the Smithsonian 
Migratory Bird Center.

  Organic bananas should also be on your list. Bananas are typically grown 
with one of the highest pesticide loads of any tropical crop. Although 
bananas present little risk of pesticide ingestion to the consumer, the 
environment where they are grown is heavily contaminated.

  When it comes to nontraditional Latin American crops like melons, green 
beans, tomatoes, bell peppers and strawberries, it can be difficult to find 
any that are organically grown. We should buy these foods only if they are 
not imported from Latin America.

  Now that spring is here, we take it for granted that the birds' cheerful 
songs will fill the air when our apple trees blossom. But each year, as we 
continue to demand out-of-season fruits and vegetables, we ensure that fewer 
and fewer songbirds will return.


Peter Stettenheim
168 Croydon Turnpike
Plainfield, NH 03781-5403
603-448-4655

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