Unique Quality Products
Preserve Our Ecosystem and Save the Honeybees
Final signature count: 0
0 signatures toward our 60,000 goal
Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Honeybee populations are in danger because they are ingesting a harmful pesticide called clothianidin. Take action for the bees!
Honeybees are vital to our life on Earth. They are critical to ecosystem success, providing food for amphibians, fish, birds, reptiles, and mammals. Insects play a role in decomposing animal wastes and dead vegetation, recycling the nutrients in these materials and returning them to the soil. Without bees, plants would not be able to reproduce and the core of our agricultural system would crumble.
Insecticides targeting crop-damaging pests reduce both the number and diversity of insects in an ecosystem1. With conventional farming practices relying primarily on chemical insecticides for pest insect management, ecosystems comprising US agricultural lands are highly impacted through both direct effects on insects and direct and indirect effects on other species2. Although many members of the ecosystem may not be exposed to sufficient doses of insecticides to suffer acutely lethal poisonings, sublethal and indirect adverse effects have been demonstrated to occur.
Right now is the time to take action in favor of saving our bees. Bee populations have begun to see sharp declines in recent years. There are several theories as to why this may be occurring, but the most widely-accepted is that neonicotinoid-based pesticides meant to protect us from other harmful bugs are having the unintended effect of killing off the bees.
Neonicotinoids are deadly to a wide range of insects, but they are safer for people and other mammals than an older family of insecticides called organophosphates. In recent years, farmers have rapidly increased their use of neonics3, which are generally applied at lower rates per acre; however, they are considerably more toxic to insects and generally persist longer in the environment4.
One of these chemicals, clothianidin, is very toxic to honeybees and has not been tested for its potential to leave trace chemicals on food.
Clothianidin impairs a bee colony’s immune response and ability to reproduce, and especially threatens the lives of queen bees5. Bee colonies in clothianidin-treated fields produce up to 66% fewer males than colonies that weren’t exposed to the chemical, and up to 74% fewer queen bees6.
Clothianidin can also lead to colony collapse disorder, or even make colonies less likely to clear out dead or sick bees from their hives, which means more bees can become infected over time7.
Sign the petition asking the EPA to ban clothianidin’s use in agricultural and household applications.