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Houston marijuana operation accused of using pesticides, falsifying records in rare criminal case Print article The state is taking the unusual step of filing criminal charges against the operators of a Houston cannabis business based on accusations they sprayed potentially toxic pesticides on marijuana plants. A state environmental crimes prosecutor this week filed misdemeanor charges of pesticide pollution, misuse of pesticide and reckless endangerment against Ron and Lacey Bass and their businesses, marijuana cultivator Calm N Collective LLC and retailer Houston Grass Station LLC. The charging documents, filed in Palmer on Monday, also indicate plans to charge the couple with falsifying business records, a felony. ....
As summer sports come to an end, MidCoast Council will be capitalising on the short break before winter sports begin, to rejuvenate grounds across the. ....
In an attempt to counter complaints that a certain pesticide is potentially hazardous to humans if absorbed into edible plants, the pesticide manufacturer has advertised . ....
Ground-nesting bees exposed to imidacloprid pesticide produced fewer offspring An insecticide used to control pest infestations on squash and pumpkins significantly hinders the reproduction of ground-nesting bees valuable pollinators for many food crops, a new University of Guelph study has revealed. This first-ever study of pesticide impacts on a ground-nesting bee in a real-world context found female hoary squash bees exposed to imidacloprid dug 85 per cent fewer nests, collected less pollen from crop flowers and produced 89 per cent fewer offspring than unexposed bees. Because they re not making nests and not collecting pollen, they cannot raise offspring, said Dr. Susan Willis Chan, a post-doc in the School of Environmental Sciences (SES), who conducted the study with Dr. Nigel Raine, holder of the Rebanks Family Chair in Pollinator Conservation in SES. That means imidacloprid-exposed populations are going to decline. ....