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Vancouver bans bee-killing pesticides

VANCOUVER — Vancouver city council has voted unanimously to ban a group of pesticides believed to contribute to bee mortality.
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A bee gets busy pollinating at a James Bay playground in 2013.

VANCOUVER — Vancouver city council has voted unanimously to ban a group of pesticides believed to contribute to bee mortality.

Neonicotinoids, or neonics, were developed in the 1990s as a safer alternative to DDT, but they are believed to kill bees by lowering their resistance to infection and weakening their ability to reproduce.

In B.C., they are widely used on fruit crops in the Okanagan and the Fraser Valley.

The use of neonics in Vancouver is on the rise, not just by farmers, but by residents, who douse their lawns to combat chafer beetles (nuisance grubs that feed on the roots of grass), according to a city report debated Tuesday by council. But the report also found that non-target insects that pollinate, rest on plants and ingest plant material are vulnerable to being poisoned.

The report says there are other ways to deal with chafer beetles that pose no harm to humans, animals or the environment, including raking, aerating, fertilizing, watering and using nematodes — microscopic roundworms that infect chafer beetles.

Vancouver’s decision comes a week after four environmental groups filed a lawsuit in federal court, alleging that Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency registered neonicotinoid pesticides in the last decade without having acquired the scientific evidence necessary to evaluate their environmental risks, in particular to pollinators.

The groups, the David Suzuki Foundation, Friends of the Earth Canada, Ontario Nature and the Wilderness Committee, want the court to overturn the agency’s approval of the pesticides.

Gwen Barlee, a spokeswoman with the Wilderness Committee, said Tuesday that there is a serious delay with Health Canada in moving to ban the pesticides, given the “overwhelming evidence” showing the toxicity to honey bees and other pollinators.

Barlee said there is a 12 to 38 per cent loss in honey bee population every winter in B.C. She said there are many contributing factors, including loss of habitat and mites, but added that research has shown that lethal impacts to bees caused by neonics range from impaired memory and less success in breeding, to reduced resistance to illness.

“The Wilderness Committee is calling for a complete ban. … I really believe we’ll have it banned within five years in Canada,” Barlee said.

Simon Fraser University researcher and bee guru Mark Winston said the scientific case for pesticides killing off wild and honey bees is strong, and he applauded Vancouver in banning neonics, which he says are unnecessary except in extreme cases.

“We overuse pesticides. There’s a huge fallacy in policy making that the only way we can feed the world is by using pesticides, and that doesn’t stand up to the data. Organic and sustainable systems are as close to or as productive as pesticide farming. So we really need to be building policy around data than around the proclamation of lobbyists,” he said. “We have to think about our values.”

Winston said B.C. could still have a thriving fruit industry if farmers switched to organic practices. He said typically it is a five-year transition to organic farming.