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Monsanto To Keep Selling Pesticide-Coated Seeds EPA Says Don't Help Yields ― And May Harm Bees

This blueberry bee, photographed at the Missouri Botanical Garden on Mar. 25, 2012, was the first recorded in Saint Louis since the 1930s.
Ed Spevak|Saint Louis Zoo
This blueberry bee, photographed at the Missouri Botanical Garden on Mar. 25, 2012, was the first recorded in Saint Louis since the 1930s.

Monsanto will continue selling soybean seeds coated with pesticides that have been linked to honey bee deaths, even though the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found the seeds do not improve yields.

This blueberry bee, photographed at the Missouri Botanical Garden on Mar. 25, 2012, was the first recorded in Saint Louis since the 1930s.
Credit Ed Spevak|Saint Louis Zoo
This blueberry bee, photographed at the Missouri Botanical Garden on Mar. 25, 2012, was the first recorded in Saint Louis since the 1930s.

The seeds in question are treated with a class of chemicals called neonicotinoids, which are chemically similar to nicotine.

Last week, the EPA released an analysis that concluded that "these seed treatments provide negligible overall benefits to soybean production in most situations." The report also said that according to published data, "in most cases there is no difference in soybean yield when soybean seed was treated with neonicotinoids versus not receiving any insect control treatment."

But Bayer and Syngenta, which manufacture the insecticides, and Monsanto, DuPont and Dow, which sell the treated seeds, say their products do benefit farmers.

Along with soybeans, most of the corn, canola and sunflower seeds planted in the U.S. are covered with neonicotinoids before they're planted.

As the crops grow, the insecticide spreads throughout the plants, protecting them from insect pests that feed on their roots or leaves.

But neonicotinoids are also highly toxic to the honeybees used to pollinate many agricultural crops. One study showed that the dust released by a corn planter can contain enough of these chemicals to kill bees.

Edward Spevak, the director of the Center for Native Pollinator Conservation at the Saint Louis Zoo, said honeybees also can take neonicotinoids back to their hives in the pollen and nectar they collect. Even those very low exposures can suppress the bees' immune systems, "which then may allow for other viruses, fungal infections, protozoan parasites, to also affect the bees," Spevak said.

Laboratory studies suggest that low doses of neonicotinoids can alter bees' behavior in other harmful ways, keeping colonies from producing queen bees or disorienting foraging bees so that they can no longer find their way back to the hive.

Last year, the European Union temporarily banned three neonicotinoids, out of concern for their risks to bees.

And a recent study by the U.S. Geological Survey found the agricultural chemicals are also leaching into Midwestern rivers and streams, where they may pose a threat to aquatic life.

Still, Bayer, which sells the most neonicotinoids, insists that most research shows they are safe.

And in a written statement provided to St. Louis Public Radio, Monsanto said it plans to continue "to provide growers the choice of using these insect-protection products next year."

Follow Véronique LaCapra on Twitter@KWMUScience

Copyright 2014 St. Louis Public Radio

Science reporter Véronique LaCapra first caught the radio bug writing commentaries for NPR affiliate WAMU in Washington, D.C. After producing her first audio documentaries at the Duke Center for Documentary Studies in N.C., she was hooked! She has done ecological research in the Brazilian Pantanal; regulated pesticides for the Environmental Protection Agency in Arlington, Va.; been a freelance writer and volunteer in South Africa; and contributed radio features to the Voice of America in Washington, D.C. She earned a Ph.D. in ecosystem ecology from the University of California in Santa Barbara, and a B.A. in environmental policy and biology from Cornell. LaCapra grew up in Cambridge, Mass., and in her mother’s home town of Auxerre, France. LeCapra reported for St. Louis Public Radio from 2010 to 2016.