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By Joel
Bourne
Each time you douse your lawn with pesticides,
you could be poisoning birds, wildlife, even the neighbor's
kids.
Whenever the subject of pesticides comes
up, it's easy to point a finger at farmers. But we homeowners,
with our manicured lawns and exotic flower gardens, have
nothing to be smug about.
Each year
we pour approximately 136 million pounds of pesticides on
our homes, lawns, and gardens,
which amounts to three times more per acre than the average
farmer applies.
In fact, most of the wildlife pesticide
poisonings reported to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency result from home use. According to the EPA's wildlife
mortality incident database, just three of the chemicals
commonly used in the garden and home --
-
diazinon,
-
chlorpyrifos,
-
and
brodifacoum
-- kill thousands of birds each year.
In the early 1990s two California metropolitan
areas -- the City of Davis and central Contra Costa County
-- discovered levels of diazinon and chlorpyrifos, high
enough to harm aquatic organisms, in their storm-water systems.
After testing, officials in both places determined that
the greatest source of
pesticides in local surface waters was single-family homes.
"Chlorpyrifos is very prevalent,"
says Jacques DeBra, pollution prevention program manager
with the City of Davis Public Works Department. "It's
like mowing the lawn. People have been using it for years.
It's hard to get them to look at alternatives."
Oddly enough, both diazinon and chlorpyrifos,
because of their high toxicity to birds and wildlife, meet
the Environmental Protection Agency's criteria for "restricted
use," which means that they require a permit and training
to purchase. The Rachel Carson Council petitioned the EPA
to upgrade the label for diazinon in 1997 and last year
requested that the use of chlorpyrifos be banned around
dwellings.
When and
where pesticides are used is also critical.
The
majority of bird kills occur in February in southern states,
where the early growing season and spring migration coincide,
followed by March, May, and April, the months when birds
as well as gardeners are on the move. Birds with the highest
risk of exposure include waterfowl, such as brant geese,
which have been known to eat large quantities of pesticide-treated
foliage.
Seed-eating songbirds, because they
are attracted to pesticide granules and treated seeds, are
also at high risk. A third hard-hit group includes scavengers
as well as raptors such as red-tailed hawks or great-horned
owls, which often feed on pesticide-poisoned prey.
To help reduce the pesticide threat,
the National Audubon Society
has launched BirdCast,
a cooperative program with Cornell University's Laboratory
of Ornithology, Clemson University's Radar Ornithology Laboratory,
the Academy of Natural Sciences, and Geo-Marine, a private
engineering firm. Employing state-of-the-art NEXRAD radar
and reports from citizen-scientists, the program will use
the Internet to post detailed radar images of bird migrations
in the Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C., metropolitan
areas.
The site (www.BirdSource.org/Birdcast/)
will tell what pesticides to avoid during peak migrations
and how to make your backyard more hospitable to birds.
The site will also provide information
on local pest threats and the safest ways to manage them.
More important, thousands of birders
will get the chance to contribute to the project by verifying
the species that visit their backyards or favorite birding
spots. They will then be able to enter their sightings into
a database and see running tallies of species almost instantly.
Kicking
the pesticide habit isn't mission impossible.
Just ask one of the nation's more than
6,000 certified organic farmers, or the City of Arcata,
California, which, after 15 years of using nontoxic pest
controls, banned
all pesticide use on city property as
of this past February.
Audubon
Magazine,
May/June 2000
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