EPA disputes pesticide link to bee deaths
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (UPI) -- The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency said it disputes allegations that the pesticide
clothianidin is linked to bee colony collapse disorder.
The EPA said the Bayer AG pesticide was approved in 2003 but
bee colony collapse disorder first occurred in 2006. EPA spokesman
Dale Kemery said beekeepers are finding empty hives instead of dead
bees, which might be expected if CCD was related to a pesticide.
While the use of clothianidin has been halted in Germany due
to concerns about its affect on bees, the EPA said recent bee deaths
there appear to be related to inadvertent exposure to clothianidin
and not CCD.
"Although pesticide exposure is one of four theoretical
factors associated with CCD that the United States Department of
Agriculture is researching, the facts in this case are not
consistent with what is known about CCD," the agency said.
Bayer AG has said clothianidin won't harm bees if applied
correctly.
Debra Edwards, the EPA's pesticide program director, was
critical of a National Resources Defense Council lawsuit accusing
the agency of failing to provide information about clothianidin.
Edwards, in a letter on the EPA's Web site, said the agency
requested more time to comply with the NRDC request.
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