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From 72 to 400: US announces expansion of number of agricultural chemicals it will monitor

For several years, biologist Nathan Donley has worried about the future of a pesticide database run by the U.S. Geological Survey, a federal agency devoted to environmental science. The Pesticide National Synthesis Project provides information about the use of agricultural chemicals in each U.S. county, with year-by-year records dating back to 1992. At its most comprehensive, the project tracked hundreds of pesticides. In 2019, the USGS reduced the number of tracked pesticides to just 72. Then, last March, a USGS employee casually mentioned to Donley that the agency intended to stop updating its database every year, and instead update it every five years. The Harrington Seed Destructor attached to the rear of a combine, in preparation for soybean harvest. Donley was floored. “Totally blew my mind,” he recalled in a recent email. The database, Donley knew, had developed a loyal following among academic researchers, environmental nonprofits, educators, and even other federal agencies. It had also been used or cited in more than 500 peer-reviewed papers. The proposed changes, Donley worried, would hamper efforts to understand and communicate how agricultural chemicals influence human health and the environment. After hearing the USGS employee’s remark, Donley, a senior scientist at the nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity, helped organize two open letters asking the USGS to reverse the changes. Both were published last May. One letter was signed by more than 250 scientists, and the other was signed by more than 100 environmental, farmworker, and public health organizations. Since then, scientists have continued to lobby the USGS.

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U.S. Geological Survey Will Restore Annual Counts of About 400 Farm Pesticides

U.S. Geological Survey Will Restore Annual Counts of About 400 Farm Pesticides
biologicaldiversity.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from biologicaldiversity.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Nathan-donley
Alan-kolok
Maggie-douglas
Dickinson-college
Us-geological
Pesticide-national-synthesis
University-of-idaho
Pesticide-use-estimates
National-synthesis-project

Big Ag pollution tied to pediatric cancers and birth defects – NaturalNews.com

Big Ag pollution tied to pediatric cancers and birth defects – NaturalNews.com
naturalnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from naturalnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Idaho

Move to change how U.S. tracks pesticide use sparks protest

Move to change how U.S. tracks pesticide use sparks protest
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United-states
Alan-kolok
Nathan-donley
Environmental-protection-agency
University-of-saskatchewan
National-pesticide-use-maps
Department-of-the
Proceedings-of-the-national-academy-sciences
Us-geological-survey
Us-department-of-agriculture
University-of-idaho

Move to change how U.S. tracks pesticide use sparks protest - Science NOW

Last year, Alan Kolok, an ecotoxicologist at the University ofIdaho, published a study that found the incidence of cancer incounties across 11 western U.S. states was correlated with the useof farm chemicals called fumigants, which kill soil pests. Thefine-grained analysis was feasible, he says, because a U.S.government database made timely, county-level statistics onpesticide use publicly available. Now, Kolok is one of manyscientists concerned that changes to the National Pesticide UseMaps database will make it far less useful to scientists. Lastmonth, he joined more than 250 researchers and dozens of publichealth and environmental groups in urging the U.S. GeologicalSurvey (USGS), which oversees the database, to reconsider moves to

Alan-kolok
Us-geological-survey
National-pesticide-use-maps
University-of-idaho

'It was crazy': Neighbors react to shocking details revealed in affidavit

'It was crazy': Neighbors react to shocking details revealed in affidavit
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