As Bees Die Off, the EPA Shuffles its Feet | Civil Eats

As Bees Die Off, the EPA Shuffles its Feet

The agency says tiny amounts of “neonics” can harm bees and beekeepers file suit over treated seeds.

Bees Near Hive

Lately it seems like bees just can’t get a break. This is the tenth consecutive year of exceptional annual bee losses. And despite heightened attention to the plight of the nation’s pollinators—which are essential to producing $15 billion worth of U.S. agricultural products a year—these losses continue to grow.

Beekeepers and scientists point to a suite of factors impacting bee health. But fundamentally, what’s stressing bees most is our current approach to agriculture: extensive pesticide use, crop monocultures, and planting patterns that have eliminated many of the blooming plants important to bees. Recent science also shows that multiple pesticide exposures are weakening bee immune systems and making them more vulnerable to diseases and pests.

At the heart of this debate are neonicotinoids, now considered the world’s most widely used type of pesticide. When the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) first approved neonicotinoids for use in the 1990s, many questions about their toxicity were left unanswered. But they were known to be toxic to bees at high levels of exposure. Now, in a just released draft assessment of imidacloprid—one of a handful of neonicotinoids in use and the first of four such assessments scheduled—the EPA says that any “residue level” above 25 parts per billion may harm “pollinator hives.”

This is significant, especially considering the way neonicotinoids are most often used: in seed treatments as systemic pesticides. As systemics, they stay with the plant as it grows and are present in nectar, pollen, and leaf surface moisture—places where bees can be exposed repeatedly to just the types of levels EPA now says are harmful.

In the U.S., neonicotinoids are now used on most of the corn and soy we grow, as well as on crops like citrus, cotton, wheat, grapes, and nut orchards. An estimated 150 million-plus acres are planted with neonicotinoid-treated seeds across the U.S. They’re also in many landscaping and garden products and are used to treat outdoor building materials. And their use has escalated rapidly. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, between 2004 and 2013, neonicotinoids used on corn went from less than half a million pounds to over 3 million pounds, and use on soy went from virtually none reported to over a million pounds.

Beekeepers Sue EPA Over Seed Treatments

“I’m out picking up dead hives right now,” said beekeeper and past president of the American Beekeeping Federation, Tim Tucker, speaking with Civil Eats from his home in southeastern Kansas. Tucker estimates that he’s lost about 50 percent of his hives so far this winter.

Commercial honeybees are expected die-off in winter, but over the past 10 years these losses have consistently been unacceptably high. And now beekeepers are also losing hives during the summer—sometimes in greater numbers than over the winter. The losses, said Tucker, “are way beyond what some of us who’ve been in the business 30 years” ever expected to see.

On January 6, the same day the EPA released its imidacloprid assessment, a group of beekeepers, farmers, and environmental groups filed suit against the EPA. The lawsuit contends that by failing to consider neonicotinoid seed treatments as pesticide use, the agency isn’t properly regulating them.

We’ll bring the news to you.

Get the weekly Civil Eats newsletter, delivered to your inbox.

As concern has grown over neonicotinoids’ adverse impacts on bees, the EPA has taken steps to limit their use when plants are blooming and bees are present. But these measures don’t apply to seed treatments. In fact, explained plaintiff and beekeeper Jeff Anderson, according to the EPA, neonicotinoid seeds are “not considered a pesticide application,” and are thus being used without adequate precautions.

As Paul Towers, spokesperson for Pesticide Action Network, one of the plaintiffs, explained, “Use of these products has grown astronomically and the EPA is ignoring the extent of this use.”

These seed treatments have “all the effects of a pesticide poisoning,” says American Beekeeping Federation president Gene Brandi, who, like Tucker, is not a party to this lawsuit, but shares the plaintiffs’ concerns.

Not only do these systemic pesticides end up throughout the crop plants and get transported back to hives, but when they’re used on corn seeds, their neonicotinoid coating often flies off as dust when the seeds are planted mechanically, explains Anderson. This material, he says, contaminates vegetation on field borders and “you end up with a lot of queen [bee] mortality that ties directly to spring planting,” he says.

The plaintiffs contend that the EPA is well aware of these problems and has not done enough to warn farmers. The agency has also said it won’t require warnings or restrictions on these these pesticides until they are formally reevaluated—a process that can take years.

Neonicotinoid manufacturers Bayer and Syngenta say they stand by their products. “We urge EPA to vigorously defend its current policies, which are clearly applicable to treated seed,” said Syngenta in a statement. According to Bayer, the EPA itself has found that “by and large imidacloprid did not pose risks to honey bee colonies, particularly on common agricultural crops like corn, potatoes, and tomatoes.”

Today’s food system is complex.

Invest in nonprofit journalism that tells the whole story.

Anderson, Brandi, and Tucker all point to what they call the “prophylactic” use of pesticides as a big part of the problem. Using them preventatively is a “complete departure” from a sustainable approach to pest management, says Tucker. “The whole neonic thing was not done properly,” he adds.

The EPA’s imidacloprid assessment is now open for public comment until mid-March. Draft risk assessments for three other neonicotinoids: clothianidin, thiamethoxam, and dinotefuran are expected in December. In the meantime, business continues as usual. And in less than a month’s time the country’s biggest pollination event of the year will get underway: California’s almond bloom.

Elizabeth Grossman was a senior reporter for Civil Eats from 2014 to 2017, where she focused on environmental and science issues. She is the author of Chasing Molecules, High Tech Trash, Watershed and other books. Her work appeared in a variety of publications, including National Geographic News, The Guardian, The Intercept, Scientific American, Environmental Health Perspectives, Yale e360, Ensia, High Country News, The Washington Post, Salon, The Nation, and Mother Jones. She passed away in July 2017, leaving behind a legacy of dedication to her mission of journalism that supports and protects people and the planet. Read more >

Like the story?
Join the conversation.

  1. James
    Anyone who wants to place neonics front and center in the debate over bees needs to temper their reading with input from the likes of Randy Oliver at Scientific Beekeeping. Banning neonics, for example, may place us in a *worse* position in terms of pesticides and pollinator hives. We need to continue research and continue development of safer products alongside better enforcement and development of safe application.

    A genuinely serious issue is nutrition. Agriculture practices are doing very great harm in this area.

    Also baffling to me is an article discussing honeybee decline over decades without so much as a mention of primary causes like the varroa mite, or clear mention that colony losses over winter is not the same as overall loss of managed honeybee colonies.
    • Edward G Lindemann
      Remember there are no safer pesticides, as there are no safe bullets.
      Any pesticide used will kill bees if they are exposed to it enough. It is not so much the initial lethal exposure but the acccumulative effect.
  2. fadedclarity
    What research has been done in a comparison to highly successful crop rotatiion with use of hemp to weed and fertilize fields? None! Yet....... it works better then any chemical, so why not promote farming on this level?
  3. Donald R. Gordon, PhD
    Why aren't the EPA scientists acting to correct these problems? Isn't it their responsibilities?
  4. Sharon Reeve
    25 parts per BILLION? What is it going to take before we start protecting the bees? Imidacloprid kills bees effectively, yet we continue to allow it to be used as a seed treatment. The seed treatment has not shown ANY benefit to crops, so why is it still being practiced? Not only is it killing bees, it kills birds too.
  5. Edward G Lindemann
    The chemical companies have deep pockets and lobbyist in their pockets, maybe the E.P.A. The powers to be the E.P.A. as it's name states is suppose to protect the environment . It's not rocket science that the bee species is highly vulnerable to pesticides it's synergist and also herbicides.

More from

Food Policy

Featured

A watercolor-style illustration of a marine observer looking through binoculars at a tuna fishing vessel. (Illustration credit: Tina Zellmer)

The True Cost of Tuna: Marine Observers Dying at Sea

The harassment, abuse, and sometimes death of the marine observers who uphold sustainable seafood standards are the industry’s worst-kept secrets. Critics say the people and companies that earn the most money on tuna aren’t doing enough to secure their well-being.

Popular

In DC, Organic Ag Gets a Funding Boost but Is Missing from the Climate Conversation

U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and former U.S. Vice President Al Gore have a kick-off plenary discussion during the AIM for Climate Summit in Washington, D.C. on Monday, May 8, 2023. The Summit is an event “for the partners, by the partners” to raise ambition, build collaborations, and share knowledge on climate-smart agriculture and food systems innovation in the lead-up to COP28. AIM for Climate partners have shaped the Summit agenda through hosting high-level plenaries, breakout sessions, interactive exhibits, and site tours. (USDA photo by Tom Witham)

Shell or High Water: Rebuilding Oyster Reefs Is a Climate Solution

Krystin Ward (right) and her sister Laura Brown harvest oysters at their oyster farm in Little Bay in Durham, New Hampshire. Krystin and Laura participate in The Nature Conservancy's SOAR program. (Photo credit: Jerry Monkman EcoPhotography)

This Fund Is Investing $20 Million to Help Black Farmers Thrive

The Black farmers at Big Dream Farm stand in the field. (Photo credit: Jared Davis)

Farm Bill Funding for Indigenous Food Producers Needs a Boost

Spring Alaska Schreiner, owner and principal ecologist at Sakari Farms, reaches down to lift a planting and its root systems inside one of six smaller greenhouses. (Photo courtesy of Sakari Farms)