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Substances in our environment
that are not good for our food:
Focusing on Pesticides
Tamar Clarke, MLS, and MPA
October 9, 2018, updated November 23, 2018
Note: This PowerPoint will be updated as new information is uncovered. This is for educational purposes.
Opening
• This presentation covers the chemicals used in agriculture and remain in
our plant based foods.
• Chemicals and other substances used in food processing, this is a separate
topic and is covered in another Powerpoint called Substances that are not
nutrients in our food.
• The term pesticides is being used in a generic way, covering fungicides and
herbicides.
• We all need to educate ourselves as to what chemicals are being used to
grow everyone’s food. The future of our planet, our children, and
everyone’s health depends upon this.
• Books have been written about this. With over 60,000 to 70,000 chemcials
in our environment, this powerpoint is just a guide to begin to understand
about which pesticides are being used or have been in use and issues with
them.
Overview
• Defining Pesticides
• Issues with Pesticides and their impact on the environment and
people
• Listing of Pesticides
• Specific Pesticides
• Addendum covered on the next slide
• Conclusion
Overview continued
• Addendum
• Bibliography
• Glossary
• Organizations involved in Environment Protection
• Other Pesticides
• Other toxins
• Found in Food
• Environmental sources
• Heavy metals
• Radiation
• Chemtrails
• Effect on Children
• Symptoms Associated with Pesticide Poisoning and Exposure
• Testing for Pesticides
• Treatment for Pesticides Poisoning
• Alternatives for Pesticide Use
Defining Pesticides
• Cide means to kill. Homicide means killing a person.
• This includes:
• Avicide – Targets birds
• Fumigants – A gaseous approach of applying a pesticide
• Fungicides – Targets parasitic fungi or their spores
• Herbicides – Targets unwanted plants
• Insecticides – Targets insects
• Pesticides – Targets small organisms and insects that are unwanted, those
that harm plants
• Rogenticides – Targets rodents
Issues about Pesticides and their impact on
the environment and people
• Pesticides are poison. They are used to kill and harm their
target.
• The main issue about pesticides is the harm to human,
animal, and plant health, both acute and long term/chronic
• Even after discontinued use of a particular pesticide, it can
remain in our soil, in the atmosphere, in water, and
environment for decades
• Agricultural workers have been harmed by pesticides
Listing of Pesticides
• Agent Orange
• Atrazine
• Chlordane
• DDT
• Dieldrin
• Duquat
• Glyphosate
•Maneb
• Neonicontinoids
• 1,3-D (1,3-Dichloropropene)
• Organophosphate (OP)
• Paraquat
Agent Orange
• Agent Orange is a herbicide and defoliant chemical.
• There are traces of dioxin in Agent Orange.
• Unfortunately, this was a chemical used in the Vietnam War. It has
left a lasting legacy of disability and genetic defects. American
soldiers exposed to Agent Orange have experienced health issues
resulting from their exposure, especially cancer.
• It affects species diversity by reducing it. It also caused
environmental damage to trees, making it difficult to regrow trees
and rebuild forests.
Atrazine
• It breaks down in the soil, it tends to hang around in the water
• Almost 90% of American drinking water has atrazine in it.
• It messes up with hormones, affects the immune system, and is linked
to birth defects
• Atrazine’s manufacturer is Syngeneta (they have been sued by 43
water authorities)
• Found to turn male frogs gay
• Causes the body to produce more female hormones likes estrogen
• Been banned by the European Union in 2003
• Affects zebra fish, goldfish, caimans, alligators, turtles, quail and rats.
• It raises questions on how this affects human health and behavior.
Chlordane
• It was found in 195 out of 628 wells tested in Stamford, Connecticut well
water.
• It was also found in New Jersey West Brook Middle School and in National
Parks.
• Chlordane was used as a pesticide from 1948 to 1988. It is a mixture of
trans-nonachlor, heptachlor, beta-chlorden, cis-chlordane, and trans-
chlordane. It was used for controlling termites and agricultural pests.
• It remains in the soil for more than 20 years after use.
• While it evaporates, when it reaches the soil and it can attach itself to
water.
• It can travel long distances and accumulate in mammals, birds, and fish and
found in the fatty tissue.
• It persists in the food supply.
Chlordane continued
• The harmful effects of Chlordane are:
• It affects the digestive system, liver, and nervous system
• Large doses can lead to convulsions and death.
• Risk factors are for lymphoma, prostate cancer, testicular cancer and breast
cancer.
• It can increase risk for type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance, migraines,
respiratory infections, obesity, immune system activation, anxiety, depression,
blurry vision, confusion, seizures, and neurological damage.
• The most common exposure is chlordane-contaminated food.
• This chemical was used in the 1960’s and 1970’s
DDT
• DDT was one of the first chemicals used widespread as a pesticide
following World War II
• DDT is found in
• Foods
• 60% of heavy cream
• 42% Kale greens
• 28% of carrots
• Body burden – 99% of the people have it in their blood
• Health impact – girls exposed to DDT before puberty are 5 times likely to develop
cancer in middle age
• It has been banned for agricultural uses in 2001 world wide
• It has been found to cause a decline in bald eagle populations due to
thinning eggshells.
Dieldrin
• Dieldrin continues to be in the environment after its application.
• It breaks down very slowly and sticks to the soil or sediments at the bottom
of streams, ponds, and lakes.
• It can attach itself to dust particles and travel long distances via the wind.
• Plants can absorb this chemical and animals and fish that eat plants
containing this chemical store it in their fatty tissue.
• Harmful effects include convulsions, and nervous system effects, and large
amounts results in death
• Prolonged exposure results in uncontrollable muscle movements, vomiting,
irritability, dizziness, and headaches. In some people, it destroyed t heir
blood cells.
Dieldrin continued
• Exposure to Dieldrin is through contaminated foods, such as shellfish
or fish from contaminated streams, lakes, meats, dairy products and
root crops.
• It can be in air, water, or contaminated soil.
• Dieldrin can be tested or measured in breast milk, feces, urine, and
blood.
Duquat
• Duquat is a herbicide and a plant growth inhibitor. It only causes
injury to the part of the plant that it is applied. It is a dissicent
because it causes a leaf or an entire plant to dry out quickly.
• It is a moderately toxic chemical. It can be fatal if swallowed, inhaled,
or absorbed through the skin. More problems occur with repeated
exposure.
• With chronic exposure, it can cause cataracts as well as other
symptoms.
• It can affect birds, depending upon the species and it can harm fish.
• As for the chemical in the soil, it is absorbed by clay particles or
organic matter for a long period of time.
Glyphosate
• It is an active ingredient in
Monsanto’s Roundup
• It may be the culprit in
widespread kidney disease in
agricultural workers in Sri Lanka,
India, and Central America.
• It is the most heavily used
pesticide used in the U.S. in
2007 (according to the EPA).
• It is getting into the food supply.
• Foods that are high in
glyphosate.
• Soy (this means soy products and
soy or vegetable oil)
• Corn and corn oil.
• Canola seeds used in canola oil.
• Beets and beet sugar.
• Almonds.
• Dried peas.
• Carrots.
• Quinoa.
Maneb
• Maneb is a fungicide and a polymeric complex of manganese with the
ethylene bis (dithiocarbamate) anionic ligand.
• It can be also used to create a toxin-based animal model of Parkinson ‘s
disease, usually in primates.
• It was included in a pesticide ban proposed by the Swedish Chemicals
Agency and approved by the European Parliament on January 13, 2009.
Neonicotinoids (also called neonics)
• It is a nerve agent.
• It includes imidaclopride, clothianidin, and thiamethoxam.
• It caused mass disappearance of entire bee colonies and other
pollinators
• It has been banned in Europe in 2013.
1, 3-D (1, 3-Dichloropropene)
• It is heavily used in California.
• It is also known as Telone.
• Is actually a gas or fumigant.
• It can escape into the atmosphere, affecting nearby communities.
Organophosphates (OP)
• It is used to poison insects and mammals.
• Organophosphate insecticides (such as diazinon) are one type of
pesticide that works by damaging an enzyme in the body called
acetylcholinesterase. This enzyme is critical for controlling nerve
signals in the body. The damage to this enzyme kills pests and may
cause unwanted side effects in exposed humans. All
organophosphates have a common mechanism of toxicity and can
cause similar symptoms in humans who have too much exposure.
• Organophosphate (OP) insecticide use is still decreasing (though not
fast enough for us, especially as the top OP insecticide is brain
harming chlorpyrifos) — from 70 million pounds used in 2000 to 20
million pounds used in 2012.
Paraquat
• It is highly toxic and kills weeds on contact.
• Exposure can be a factor in Parkinson’s disease, can cause kidney
damage and difficulty in breathing
• It has been banned in China and European Union.
Addendum
• Bibliography
• Glossary
• Organizations involved in
Environmental Protection
• Other Pesticides not covered
• Avicides
• Fungicides
• Herbicides
• Insecticides
• Regenticides
• Other
• Other Toxins
• Found in Food
• Environmental sources
• Heavy metals
• Radiation
• Chemtrails
• Effect on Children
• Symptoms Associated with
Pesticide Poisoning and
Exposure
• Testing for Pesticides
• Treatment for Pesticide
Poisoning
• Alternatives for Pesticide Use
Addendum: Bibliography (slide one of four)
• Chemtrails, HAARP, and the full spectrum domininance of planet Earth
(2014) by Elana Freeland. (Publisher: Feral Press).
• Children and environmental toxins – what everyone needs to know (2018)
by Philip Landrigan and Mary M. Landrigan. (Publisher: Oxford University
Press).
• http://hesperian.org/wp-
content/uploads/pdf/en_cgeh_2012/en_cgeh_2012_14.pdf
• http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
• http://widmerassoc.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Humic-Folvic-
Ulmic-acid-roles-in-agriculture.pdf
• http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2012/06/in-pesticide-residue-rankings-
apples-and-celery-worst-onions-and-corn-best/
• http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s-
homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide two
of four)
• http://www.neonnettle.com/news/4527-monsanto-deliberately-sold-banned-
chemicals-despite-knowing-they-caused-cancer
• http://www.nutritionalmedicine.info
• http://www.panna.org/resources/ddt-story
• http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
• http://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/dioxins-and-their-effects-
on-human-health
• https://draxe.com/fulvic-acid/
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_Orange
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzene_in_soft_drinks
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maneb
Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide
three of four)
• https://wellnessmama.com/61295/humic-acid-uses-benefits
• https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxfaqs/tf.asp?id=140&tid=26
• https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/clusters/Fallon/organophosfaq.htm
• https://www.chemicalsafetyfacts.org/ammonia/
• https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/7/13/1780218/-Pence-
family-left-a-21-million-environmental-disaster-in-
Indiana?detail=emaildkre
• https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2014-
03/documents/ffrrofactsheet_contaminant_perchlorate_january2014
_final.pdf
• https://www.naturalnews.com/
Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide four
of four)
• https://www.naturalnews.com/037106_pesticides_exposure_herbicides.html
• https://www.naturalnews.com/042020_Florida_pesticides_farm_workers.html
• https://www.naturalnews.com/054789_farm_workers_pesticide_exposure_chemical_agriculture.html
• https://www.naturalnews.com/z026177_Parkinsons_disease_pesticides.html
• https://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/pesticides/index.cfm
• https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-
in-other-countries/
• https://www.who.int/features/qa/87/en/
• Pesticides (2007) by Katherine MacFarlane. (Publisher: Thomson Gale)
• Silent Spring (1997) by Rachel Carson. (Publisher: Fawcett)
Addendum: Glossary
• Acceptable daily intakes (ADIs) – establishes maximum residue limits
(MRLs) for a specific chemical
• Carcinogenic – causes cancer
• Chemtrails – chemicals released from flying aircraft in the sky
• Endocrine disrupters – chemicals that mimic or interfere with natural
hormones
• Fumigants – a gaseous approach of applying a pesticide
• Latency and incubation period – development of a disease years after
exposure
• Neurotoxic – cause damage to the brain
• Risk assessment – what is a safe level for intake without harm
• Subclinical toxicity – effects of toxic exposure not easily seen
• Teratogenic – can cause damage to the fetus
Addendum: Organizations involved in
Environmental Protection
• Chemical Safety Facts: https://www.chemicalsafetyfacts.org/
• EPA – Environmental Protection Agency: www.epa.gov
• EWG – Environmental Working Group: https://www.ewg.org
• NRDC – Natural Resources Defense Council: https://www.nrdc.org/
• Natural News - http://www.healthranger.com/
• Pesticide Action Network - http://www.panna.org/about-us
• World Health Organization - http://www.who.int/
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Avicides
• 4-Amino Pyridine
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Fumigants
• Carbon Disulfide
• Halocarbons
• Hydrogen Cyanide, Acrylonitrile & Sodium Cyanide
• Metal Phosphides
• Methyl Bromide, Ethylene Oxide & Propylene Oxide
• Phosphine
• Sulfur Dioxide, Formaldehyde, Chloropicrin & Acrolein
• Sulfuryl Flouride
Note: Fumigants is more how a pesticide is delivered in a form of gas.
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Fungicides
• Benzonitriles
• Copper salts & Organic Complexes
• Cycloheximide
• Dicarboximides
• Phenylmercuric Salts
• Thiocarbamates & Dithiocarbamates
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Herbicides
• Acetamides
• Acetanilidies
• Carbanilate
• Chlorophenoxy Pesticides
• Dinitroaniline Compounds
• Dithiocarbamates
• Endothal
• Oxadiazola
• Pentachlorophenol
• Phosphonomethyl Glycine
• Picolinic Acid
• Sodium Chlorate
• Thiadizin
• Triazines
• Uracils
• Urea
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Insecticides
• Alumino Fluoride Salt
• Bensoic & Benzilic Derivative
• Carbamates
• Chlordimeform
• Nicotine Sulfate
• Organochlorines
Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered:
Rodenticides
• Antu and Norbormide
• Arsenical Pesticides
• Red Squill
• Sodium Fluoroacete
• Strychnine & Crimidine
• Yellow Phosphorus
• Zinc Phosphide
Addendum: Other Pesticides not covered
• Arsenical Pesticides
• Chlorophenoxy Pesticides
• Pentachlorophenol
• Polyethoxylated tallow amine (in Roundup)
• Pyrethrins & Pyrethroids
• Thiocarbamates
Addendum: Other Toxins
• Found in Food
• See Powerpoint covering Substances
that are not nutrients in our food
• Includes GMOs (can cause problems)
• Benzene in drinks
• Environmental sources
• Arsenic (in treated wood)
• Asbestos (in buildings)
• Chemtrails (covered in next slide)
• Flame retardants
• Mold
• Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
• Heavy Metals
• Aluminum
• Cadmium
• Lead
• Mercury
• Radiation
• Cell phones
• Electric power lines
• Smart meters
• Other
Addendum: Chemtrails
Information
• While chemtrails are not pesticides, it
is helpful to know what they are.
• Chemtrails are chemicals released
from flying airplanes flying in the sky
leaving a long white cloud like line.
• Chemtrails contain a number of
substances, some of them toxic. One
substance is silver iodide which is
toxic to plants and to us. Polymers are
used.
• These chemicals in high amounts are
not safe for anyone.
Substances in Chemtrails
• Aluminum
• Arsenic
• Barium
• Boron
• Cadmium
• Iron
• Lithium
• Maganese
• Sulfur dioxide
• Zinc
Addendum: Effect on Children
• Research is available indicating that fetuses, infants, toddlers, and
young children are more vulnerable to environmental toxins. This
would include pesticides.
• With their small body size, their exposure to toxins is much higher than for
adults.
• Children’s metabolic pathways are immature and they are less able to
detoxify.
• Children are undergoing rapid growth and development and toxins can
interfere with that process.
• Children have future years ahead of them and they can develop health issues
down the pike and at a later time in life. This is called latency and incubation.
Source: Children and Environmental Toxins: what everyone needs to know (2018) by Philip J.
Landregan, MD, MSC, FAAP and Mary M. Landrigan, MPA. (Publisher: Oxford University Press)
Addendum: Symptoms Associated with
Pesticide Poisoning and Exposure
Acute
• Blurred vision
• Chest pains
• Giddiness
• Headache
• Nausea
Long Term (Chronic)
• Birth defects
• Genetic effects
• Impotence
• Infertility
• Miscarriage
• Nervous system disorders
• Sterility
• Tumors
Addendum: Testing for Pesticides
• Testing is available to check for pesticides in food. It is:
• inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry instrument (ICP-MS)
• liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (LC-MS) (Detect pesticides,
herbicides, and other organic molecules)
• For more information, check out the website for Mike Adams, the
Health Ranger and his website: https://www.NaturalNews.com
Addendum: Treatment for Pesticide Poisoning
• Treatment depends on the pesticide, the degree, and the type of
exposure:
• On the skin
• Swallowing
• Inhalation
• For treatment, it is important to the know the name of the chemical:
• Treatment methods:
• Bioactive carbons
• Fulvic acid
• Humic acid
• Ulmic acid
• Note: For serious reactions, seek professional medical help.
Addendum: Alternatives for Pesticide Use
• A number of steps can be used to reduce pesticide use, as their
dangers become better known. They include:
• Reduce use of pesticide, use only when needed and in small amounts
• Organic farming
• Physical pest control
• Cultural methods of pest control (plowing, mulching, use of plastic sheets)
• Biological methods of pest control
• Genetic Pest Control
• Integrated pest management (IPM)
• Xeroculture – plants that need less water
Source: Pesticides (2007) by Katherine MacFarlane (Publisher: Thomspon Gale).
Conclusion
• Everyone needs to be aware of what pesticides can do and the
harm that they can cause. Unfortunately, we cannot see them
and are invisible after application. We need to be concerned
about the presence of these chemicals in food. We also need to
be concerned on how these chemicals can spread to other plants
and locations.
• It is important to be aware of the synergistic effect when people
are exposed to more than one toxic substance at the same time.
Exposure, both acute and chronic, can overwhelm the immune
system.
• When used, pesticides have to be used in a responsible manner.
• People involved in pest control need to take extra steps to
protect their immediate and long term health. Extra steps are
needed to protect farm workers from pesticide harm.
• Whenever possible, we need to seek alternatives that are safer
for all of us and for our planet.

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Environmental toxins and pesticides november 2018

  • 1. Substances in our environment that are not good for our food: Focusing on Pesticides Tamar Clarke, MLS, and MPA October 9, 2018, updated November 23, 2018 Note: This PowerPoint will be updated as new information is uncovered. This is for educational purposes.
  • 2. Opening • This presentation covers the chemicals used in agriculture and remain in our plant based foods. • Chemicals and other substances used in food processing, this is a separate topic and is covered in another Powerpoint called Substances that are not nutrients in our food. • The term pesticides is being used in a generic way, covering fungicides and herbicides. • We all need to educate ourselves as to what chemicals are being used to grow everyone’s food. The future of our planet, our children, and everyone’s health depends upon this. • Books have been written about this. With over 60,000 to 70,000 chemcials in our environment, this powerpoint is just a guide to begin to understand about which pesticides are being used or have been in use and issues with them.
  • 3. Overview • Defining Pesticides • Issues with Pesticides and their impact on the environment and people • Listing of Pesticides • Specific Pesticides • Addendum covered on the next slide • Conclusion
  • 4. Overview continued • Addendum • Bibliography • Glossary • Organizations involved in Environment Protection • Other Pesticides • Other toxins • Found in Food • Environmental sources • Heavy metals • Radiation • Chemtrails • Effect on Children • Symptoms Associated with Pesticide Poisoning and Exposure • Testing for Pesticides • Treatment for Pesticides Poisoning • Alternatives for Pesticide Use
  • 5. Defining Pesticides • Cide means to kill. Homicide means killing a person. • This includes: • Avicide – Targets birds • Fumigants – A gaseous approach of applying a pesticide • Fungicides – Targets parasitic fungi or their spores • Herbicides – Targets unwanted plants • Insecticides – Targets insects • Pesticides – Targets small organisms and insects that are unwanted, those that harm plants • Rogenticides – Targets rodents
  • 6. Issues about Pesticides and their impact on the environment and people • Pesticides are poison. They are used to kill and harm their target. • The main issue about pesticides is the harm to human, animal, and plant health, both acute and long term/chronic • Even after discontinued use of a particular pesticide, it can remain in our soil, in the atmosphere, in water, and environment for decades • Agricultural workers have been harmed by pesticides
  • 7. Listing of Pesticides • Agent Orange • Atrazine • Chlordane • DDT • Dieldrin • Duquat • Glyphosate •Maneb • Neonicontinoids • 1,3-D (1,3-Dichloropropene) • Organophosphate (OP) • Paraquat
  • 8. Agent Orange • Agent Orange is a herbicide and defoliant chemical. • There are traces of dioxin in Agent Orange. • Unfortunately, this was a chemical used in the Vietnam War. It has left a lasting legacy of disability and genetic defects. American soldiers exposed to Agent Orange have experienced health issues resulting from their exposure, especially cancer. • It affects species diversity by reducing it. It also caused environmental damage to trees, making it difficult to regrow trees and rebuild forests.
  • 9. Atrazine • It breaks down in the soil, it tends to hang around in the water • Almost 90% of American drinking water has atrazine in it. • It messes up with hormones, affects the immune system, and is linked to birth defects • Atrazine’s manufacturer is Syngeneta (they have been sued by 43 water authorities) • Found to turn male frogs gay • Causes the body to produce more female hormones likes estrogen • Been banned by the European Union in 2003 • Affects zebra fish, goldfish, caimans, alligators, turtles, quail and rats. • It raises questions on how this affects human health and behavior.
  • 10. Chlordane • It was found in 195 out of 628 wells tested in Stamford, Connecticut well water. • It was also found in New Jersey West Brook Middle School and in National Parks. • Chlordane was used as a pesticide from 1948 to 1988. It is a mixture of trans-nonachlor, heptachlor, beta-chlorden, cis-chlordane, and trans- chlordane. It was used for controlling termites and agricultural pests. • It remains in the soil for more than 20 years after use. • While it evaporates, when it reaches the soil and it can attach itself to water. • It can travel long distances and accumulate in mammals, birds, and fish and found in the fatty tissue. • It persists in the food supply.
  • 11. Chlordane continued • The harmful effects of Chlordane are: • It affects the digestive system, liver, and nervous system • Large doses can lead to convulsions and death. • Risk factors are for lymphoma, prostate cancer, testicular cancer and breast cancer. • It can increase risk for type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance, migraines, respiratory infections, obesity, immune system activation, anxiety, depression, blurry vision, confusion, seizures, and neurological damage. • The most common exposure is chlordane-contaminated food. • This chemical was used in the 1960’s and 1970’s
  • 12. DDT • DDT was one of the first chemicals used widespread as a pesticide following World War II • DDT is found in • Foods • 60% of heavy cream • 42% Kale greens • 28% of carrots • Body burden – 99% of the people have it in their blood • Health impact – girls exposed to DDT before puberty are 5 times likely to develop cancer in middle age • It has been banned for agricultural uses in 2001 world wide • It has been found to cause a decline in bald eagle populations due to thinning eggshells.
  • 13. Dieldrin • Dieldrin continues to be in the environment after its application. • It breaks down very slowly and sticks to the soil or sediments at the bottom of streams, ponds, and lakes. • It can attach itself to dust particles and travel long distances via the wind. • Plants can absorb this chemical and animals and fish that eat plants containing this chemical store it in their fatty tissue. • Harmful effects include convulsions, and nervous system effects, and large amounts results in death • Prolonged exposure results in uncontrollable muscle movements, vomiting, irritability, dizziness, and headaches. In some people, it destroyed t heir blood cells.
  • 14. Dieldrin continued • Exposure to Dieldrin is through contaminated foods, such as shellfish or fish from contaminated streams, lakes, meats, dairy products and root crops. • It can be in air, water, or contaminated soil. • Dieldrin can be tested or measured in breast milk, feces, urine, and blood.
  • 15. Duquat • Duquat is a herbicide and a plant growth inhibitor. It only causes injury to the part of the plant that it is applied. It is a dissicent because it causes a leaf or an entire plant to dry out quickly. • It is a moderately toxic chemical. It can be fatal if swallowed, inhaled, or absorbed through the skin. More problems occur with repeated exposure. • With chronic exposure, it can cause cataracts as well as other symptoms. • It can affect birds, depending upon the species and it can harm fish. • As for the chemical in the soil, it is absorbed by clay particles or organic matter for a long period of time.
  • 16. Glyphosate • It is an active ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup • It may be the culprit in widespread kidney disease in agricultural workers in Sri Lanka, India, and Central America. • It is the most heavily used pesticide used in the U.S. in 2007 (according to the EPA). • It is getting into the food supply. • Foods that are high in glyphosate. • Soy (this means soy products and soy or vegetable oil) • Corn and corn oil. • Canola seeds used in canola oil. • Beets and beet sugar. • Almonds. • Dried peas. • Carrots. • Quinoa.
  • 17. Maneb • Maneb is a fungicide and a polymeric complex of manganese with the ethylene bis (dithiocarbamate) anionic ligand. • It can be also used to create a toxin-based animal model of Parkinson ‘s disease, usually in primates. • It was included in a pesticide ban proposed by the Swedish Chemicals Agency and approved by the European Parliament on January 13, 2009.
  • 18. Neonicotinoids (also called neonics) • It is a nerve agent. • It includes imidaclopride, clothianidin, and thiamethoxam. • It caused mass disappearance of entire bee colonies and other pollinators • It has been banned in Europe in 2013.
  • 19. 1, 3-D (1, 3-Dichloropropene) • It is heavily used in California. • It is also known as Telone. • Is actually a gas or fumigant. • It can escape into the atmosphere, affecting nearby communities.
  • 20. Organophosphates (OP) • It is used to poison insects and mammals. • Organophosphate insecticides (such as diazinon) are one type of pesticide that works by damaging an enzyme in the body called acetylcholinesterase. This enzyme is critical for controlling nerve signals in the body. The damage to this enzyme kills pests and may cause unwanted side effects in exposed humans. All organophosphates have a common mechanism of toxicity and can cause similar symptoms in humans who have too much exposure. • Organophosphate (OP) insecticide use is still decreasing (though not fast enough for us, especially as the top OP insecticide is brain harming chlorpyrifos) — from 70 million pounds used in 2000 to 20 million pounds used in 2012.
  • 21. Paraquat • It is highly toxic and kills weeds on contact. • Exposure can be a factor in Parkinson’s disease, can cause kidney damage and difficulty in breathing • It has been banned in China and European Union.
  • 22. Addendum • Bibliography • Glossary • Organizations involved in Environmental Protection • Other Pesticides not covered • Avicides • Fungicides • Herbicides • Insecticides • Regenticides • Other • Other Toxins • Found in Food • Environmental sources • Heavy metals • Radiation • Chemtrails • Effect on Children • Symptoms Associated with Pesticide Poisoning and Exposure • Testing for Pesticides • Treatment for Pesticide Poisoning • Alternatives for Pesticide Use
  • 23. Addendum: Bibliography (slide one of four) • Chemtrails, HAARP, and the full spectrum domininance of planet Earth (2014) by Elana Freeland. (Publisher: Feral Press). • Children and environmental toxins – what everyone needs to know (2018) by Philip Landrigan and Mary M. Landrigan. (Publisher: Oxford University Press). • http://hesperian.org/wp- content/uploads/pdf/en_cgeh_2012/en_cgeh_2012_14.pdf • http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx • http://widmerassoc.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Humic-Folvic- Ulmic-acid-roles-in-agriculture.pdf • http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2012/06/in-pesticide-residue-rankings- apples-and-celery-worst-onions-and-corn-best/ • http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s- homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
  • 24. Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide two of four) • http://www.neonnettle.com/news/4527-monsanto-deliberately-sold-banned- chemicals-despite-knowing-they-caused-cancer • http://www.nutritionalmedicine.info • http://www.panna.org/resources/ddt-story • http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx • http://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/dioxins-and-their-effects- on-human-health • https://draxe.com/fulvic-acid/ • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_Orange • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzene_in_soft_drinks • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maneb
  • 25. Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide three of four) • https://wellnessmama.com/61295/humic-acid-uses-benefits • https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxfaqs/tf.asp?id=140&tid=26 • https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/clusters/Fallon/organophosfaq.htm • https://www.chemicalsafetyfacts.org/ammonia/ • https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/7/13/1780218/-Pence- family-left-a-21-million-environmental-disaster-in- Indiana?detail=emaildkre • https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2014- 03/documents/ffrrofactsheet_contaminant_perchlorate_january2014 _final.pdf • https://www.naturalnews.com/
  • 26. Addendum: Bibliography continued (slide four of four) • https://www.naturalnews.com/037106_pesticides_exposure_herbicides.html • https://www.naturalnews.com/042020_Florida_pesticides_farm_workers.html • https://www.naturalnews.com/054789_farm_workers_pesticide_exposure_chemical_agriculture.html • https://www.naturalnews.com/z026177_Parkinsons_disease_pesticides.html • https://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/pesticides/index.cfm • https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned- in-other-countries/ • https://www.who.int/features/qa/87/en/ • Pesticides (2007) by Katherine MacFarlane. (Publisher: Thomson Gale) • Silent Spring (1997) by Rachel Carson. (Publisher: Fawcett)
  • 27. Addendum: Glossary • Acceptable daily intakes (ADIs) – establishes maximum residue limits (MRLs) for a specific chemical • Carcinogenic – causes cancer • Chemtrails – chemicals released from flying aircraft in the sky • Endocrine disrupters – chemicals that mimic or interfere with natural hormones • Fumigants – a gaseous approach of applying a pesticide • Latency and incubation period – development of a disease years after exposure • Neurotoxic – cause damage to the brain • Risk assessment – what is a safe level for intake without harm • Subclinical toxicity – effects of toxic exposure not easily seen • Teratogenic – can cause damage to the fetus
  • 28. Addendum: Organizations involved in Environmental Protection • Chemical Safety Facts: https://www.chemicalsafetyfacts.org/ • EPA – Environmental Protection Agency: www.epa.gov • EWG – Environmental Working Group: https://www.ewg.org • NRDC – Natural Resources Defense Council: https://www.nrdc.org/ • Natural News - http://www.healthranger.com/ • Pesticide Action Network - http://www.panna.org/about-us • World Health Organization - http://www.who.int/
  • 29. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Avicides • 4-Amino Pyridine
  • 30. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Fumigants • Carbon Disulfide • Halocarbons • Hydrogen Cyanide, Acrylonitrile & Sodium Cyanide • Metal Phosphides • Methyl Bromide, Ethylene Oxide & Propylene Oxide • Phosphine • Sulfur Dioxide, Formaldehyde, Chloropicrin & Acrolein • Sulfuryl Flouride Note: Fumigants is more how a pesticide is delivered in a form of gas.
  • 31. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Fungicides • Benzonitriles • Copper salts & Organic Complexes • Cycloheximide • Dicarboximides • Phenylmercuric Salts • Thiocarbamates & Dithiocarbamates
  • 32. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Herbicides • Acetamides • Acetanilidies • Carbanilate • Chlorophenoxy Pesticides • Dinitroaniline Compounds • Dithiocarbamates • Endothal • Oxadiazola • Pentachlorophenol • Phosphonomethyl Glycine • Picolinic Acid • Sodium Chlorate • Thiadizin • Triazines • Uracils • Urea
  • 33. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Insecticides • Alumino Fluoride Salt • Bensoic & Benzilic Derivative • Carbamates • Chlordimeform • Nicotine Sulfate • Organochlorines
  • 34. Addendum: Other Pesticides Not Covered: Rodenticides • Antu and Norbormide • Arsenical Pesticides • Red Squill • Sodium Fluoroacete • Strychnine & Crimidine • Yellow Phosphorus • Zinc Phosphide
  • 35. Addendum: Other Pesticides not covered • Arsenical Pesticides • Chlorophenoxy Pesticides • Pentachlorophenol • Polyethoxylated tallow amine (in Roundup) • Pyrethrins & Pyrethroids • Thiocarbamates
  • 36. Addendum: Other Toxins • Found in Food • See Powerpoint covering Substances that are not nutrients in our food • Includes GMOs (can cause problems) • Benzene in drinks • Environmental sources • Arsenic (in treated wood) • Asbestos (in buildings) • Chemtrails (covered in next slide) • Flame retardants • Mold • Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) • Heavy Metals • Aluminum • Cadmium • Lead • Mercury • Radiation • Cell phones • Electric power lines • Smart meters • Other
  • 37. Addendum: Chemtrails Information • While chemtrails are not pesticides, it is helpful to know what they are. • Chemtrails are chemicals released from flying airplanes flying in the sky leaving a long white cloud like line. • Chemtrails contain a number of substances, some of them toxic. One substance is silver iodide which is toxic to plants and to us. Polymers are used. • These chemicals in high amounts are not safe for anyone. Substances in Chemtrails • Aluminum • Arsenic • Barium • Boron • Cadmium • Iron • Lithium • Maganese • Sulfur dioxide • Zinc
  • 38. Addendum: Effect on Children • Research is available indicating that fetuses, infants, toddlers, and young children are more vulnerable to environmental toxins. This would include pesticides. • With their small body size, their exposure to toxins is much higher than for adults. • Children’s metabolic pathways are immature and they are less able to detoxify. • Children are undergoing rapid growth and development and toxins can interfere with that process. • Children have future years ahead of them and they can develop health issues down the pike and at a later time in life. This is called latency and incubation. Source: Children and Environmental Toxins: what everyone needs to know (2018) by Philip J. Landregan, MD, MSC, FAAP and Mary M. Landrigan, MPA. (Publisher: Oxford University Press)
  • 39. Addendum: Symptoms Associated with Pesticide Poisoning and Exposure Acute • Blurred vision • Chest pains • Giddiness • Headache • Nausea Long Term (Chronic) • Birth defects • Genetic effects • Impotence • Infertility • Miscarriage • Nervous system disorders • Sterility • Tumors
  • 40. Addendum: Testing for Pesticides • Testing is available to check for pesticides in food. It is: • inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry instrument (ICP-MS) • liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (LC-MS) (Detect pesticides, herbicides, and other organic molecules) • For more information, check out the website for Mike Adams, the Health Ranger and his website: https://www.NaturalNews.com
  • 41. Addendum: Treatment for Pesticide Poisoning • Treatment depends on the pesticide, the degree, and the type of exposure: • On the skin • Swallowing • Inhalation • For treatment, it is important to the know the name of the chemical: • Treatment methods: • Bioactive carbons • Fulvic acid • Humic acid • Ulmic acid • Note: For serious reactions, seek professional medical help.
  • 42. Addendum: Alternatives for Pesticide Use • A number of steps can be used to reduce pesticide use, as their dangers become better known. They include: • Reduce use of pesticide, use only when needed and in small amounts • Organic farming • Physical pest control • Cultural methods of pest control (plowing, mulching, use of plastic sheets) • Biological methods of pest control • Genetic Pest Control • Integrated pest management (IPM) • Xeroculture – plants that need less water Source: Pesticides (2007) by Katherine MacFarlane (Publisher: Thomspon Gale).
  • 43. Conclusion • Everyone needs to be aware of what pesticides can do and the harm that they can cause. Unfortunately, we cannot see them and are invisible after application. We need to be concerned about the presence of these chemicals in food. We also need to be concerned on how these chemicals can spread to other plants and locations. • It is important to be aware of the synergistic effect when people are exposed to more than one toxic substance at the same time. Exposure, both acute and chronic, can overwhelm the immune system. • When used, pesticides have to be used in a responsible manner. • People involved in pest control need to take extra steps to protect their immediate and long term health. Extra steps are needed to protect farm workers from pesticide harm. • Whenever possible, we need to seek alternatives that are safer for all of us and for our planet.

Editor's Notes

  1. https://www.naturalnews.com/037106_pesticides_exposure_herbicides.html
  2. https://www.naturalnews.com/054789_farm_workers_pesticide_exposure_chemical_agriculture.html
  3. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent_Orange http://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/dioxins-and-their-effects-on-human-health
  4. Source: https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-in-other-countries/ And Source: https://www.pollution.news/2018-07-10-scientific-american-confirms-atrazine-herbicide-is-a-sex-changing-weed-killer-that-turns-male-frogs-gay.html
  5. Source: http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s-homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
  6. Source: http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s-homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
  7. Source: http://www.panna.org/resources/ddt-story
  8. Source: http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s-homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
  9. Source: http://www.herbs-info.com/blog/dangerous-pesticide-found-in-64-of-u-s-homes-20-years-after-being-banned/?c=d
  10. Source: http://pmep.cce.cornell.edu/profiles/extoxnet/dienochlor-glyphosate/diquat-ext.html
  11. Source: https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-in-other-countries/ https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/glyphosate-in-food/
  12. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maneb
  13. Source: https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-in-other-countries/ And Source: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/gmo-neonicotinoid-pesticides-national-wildlife-refuges_us_5b648dd5e4b0de86f4a0fd15?ncid=engmodushpmg00000003
  14. Source: https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-in-other-countries/
  15. Source: https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/clusters/Fallon/organophosfaq.htm
  16. Source: https://www.revealnews.org/article-legacy/5-pesticides-used-in-us-are-banned-in-other-countries/
  17. Source: https://www.who.int/featres/qa/87/en/
  18. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx Note: A few of the chemicals listed are more than one category. Just the first one was listed.
  19. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
  20. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
  21. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
  22. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
  23. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx
  24. Source: http://psep.cce.cornell.edu/Tutorials/core-tutorial/module09/index.aspx Arsenic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenic#Agricultural Carbamates: https://dhss.delaware.gov/dph/files/organophospestfaq.pdf Chlorophenoxy Pesticides Dithiocarbamates: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/biochemistry-genetics-and-molecular-biology/dithiocarbamates Organochlorines: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/agricultural-and-biological-sciences/chlorophenoxy-herbicide Pentachlorophenol: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/pentachlorophenol.pdf And https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-09/documents/pentachlorophenol.pdf Pyrethrins & Pyrethroids: https://www.epa.gov/ingredients-used-pesticide-products/pyrethrins-and-pyrethroids Thiocarbamates (note: seem to be a number of carbamates groups of chemicals)
  25. This is not the focus of this powerpoint. However, we need to be aware of the exposures that can affect our health.
  26. Source: Chemtrails, HAARP, and the full spectrum domininance of planet Earth (2014) by Elana Freeland. (Publisher: Feral House). Note: Communities have requested that these chemtrails be banned from flying over their space. It is also important to realize the various forms chemicals can be in, like the chromium covered in the movie called Erin Brockovich. If you are running an organic based farm or any farm, you don’t want to see chemtrails over your fields. The author says that chemtrails can be used to spread bacteria and pathogens that can cause disease.
  27. Another source indicated that pesticides can be absorbed by the anatomy: Forearm 8.6% Palm of Hand 11.8% Ball of Feet 13.5% Abdomen 18.4% Scalp 32.1% Forehead 36.3% Ear Canal 46.5% Scrotum 100%
  28. Source: http://hesperian.org/wp-content/uploads/pdf/en_cgeh_2012/en_cgeh_2012_14.pdf https://draxe.com/fulvic-acid/ https://wellnessmama.com/61295/humic-acid-uses-benefits/ http://widmerassoc.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Humic-Folvic-Ulmic-acid-roles-in-agriculture.pdf
  29. Note: As more information becomes available, this powerpoint presentation will be updated.