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josh
Date: 8/11/2009 2:53 pm
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Resource Conservation Manitoba News Release: Winnipeg, August 10, 2009
The City of Winnipeg plans to begin spraying neighbourhood and
riverbank elm trees Monday morning with a dangerous pesticide,
Chlorpyrifos, as part of a control program for Dutch Elm Disease. The
spray program is set to begin Monday morning targeting select Winnipeg
neighbourhoods, as well as along the banks of the Seine and LaSalle
Rivers. Resource Conservation Manitoba is concerned the spraying could
impact human health and the environment.
Chlorpyros is a pesticide that attacks an enzyme responsible for
transmitting information in the beetle's nervous system, thus killing
insect. The enzyme is common to all vertebrates, including humans. This
raises the possibility that humans, pets and wildlife could be affected
if they are exposed to the product.
"Certainly protecting our elm forest in Winnipeg is important.
However, there is still only a limited understanding of the long term
effects of this product on human populations. I am concerned that not
enough attention has been given to alternative methods of pest
control." said Josh Brandon, Living Green, Living Well Coordinator with
Resource Conservation Manitoba. "At the very least, the City should be
allowing residents to register for buffer zones, as it does for its
other pesticide spray programs."
As well as being a threat to human health, the chemical is
especially dangerous to aquatic organisms. The pesticide manufacturer,
Agrium Advanced Technologies, explicitly warns on product label:
This product is toxic to birds and wildlife, and extremely toxic to
fish and aquatic organisms. Do not apply directly to water. Drift and
run-off from treated areas may be hazardous to aquatic organisms in
adjacent aquatic sites.
Resource Conservation Manitoba asks the City to refrain from
spraying riverbanks, recognizing the certainty of run off into City
waterways. Also, Resource Conservation Manitoba urges that City
policies on pesticides reflect a commitment to ecological
sustainability and the precautionary principle.
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Contact: Josh Brandon, Living Green, Living Well Coordinator, (204) 925-3771
More information:
Dursban warning label
Living Green Ecoblog entry on pesticide program
Winnipeg News Release
Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment