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Dangerous Beauty.


Flower Farms May Threaten Workers and the Environment

Driving through central Costa Rica Costa Rica (kŏs`tə rē`kə), officially Republic of Costa Rica, republic (2005 est. pop. 4,016,000), 19,575 sq mi (50,700 sq km), Central America.  below the Tilaran Mountains, travelers see a hillside blanketed with exotic flowers. But the bucolic vision is immediately undercut by the sight of a semi-rusted drum, etched with a skull-and-crossbones warning. Workers -- mostly women -- dip plants ready for shipping into a noxious-looking brew. The workers are bare-armed, with no gloves or face masks to protect them from the pesticides vital to the international floriculture floriculture

Branch of ornamental horticulture concerned with growing and marketing flowers and ornamental plants, as well as with flower arrangement. Because flowers and potted plants are largely produced in plant-growing structures in temperate climates, floriculture is
 market.

Flowers are emerging as a stable and very marketable international crop, earning up to five times per acre what fruit crops bring in. To meet the high aesthetic standards of the American market (the largest for cut flowers) and to kill insects possibly harbored in the plants, growers use any means at their disposal--including banned and unregistered pesticides (up to one-fifth of pesticide use), heavy loads of synthetic growth hormones and fertilizers, and an illiterate, underpaid workforce, reports the World Resources Institute Founded in 1982, the World Resources Institute (WRI) is an environmental think tank based in Washington, D.C. WRI is an independent, non-partisan and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists, economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical  (WRI WRI Wolfram Research, Inc. (makers of Mathematica)
WRI World Resources Institute
WRI War Resisters' International
WRI Western Research Institute (Laramie, WY)
WRI Water Research Institute
).

Pesticide use is not mandated by U.S. law, but bug-free flowers are. According to Wayne Burnett, import specialist with the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's Plant Protection and Quarantine Division, the risk of having valuable shipments rejected by customs because of insect infestations "stimulates people offshore to increase their pesticide use. There's a lot of economic pressure to keep those shipments from being rejected."

Gaston Dorren and Niala Maharaj, authors of The Game of the Rose, note that floriculture consumes more pesticides than any other agricultural sector. In order to meet the flurry of holiday sales, particularly around Mother's Day, U.S. florists have relied heavily on imports in recent years to supplement flowers grown here, mainly in California. Only 40 percent of U.S. demand is met domestically.

Floral workers--the sprayers and handlers--suffer the brunt of the trade's pesticide use: Two-thirds of Colombian flower workers suffer from headaches, nausea, impaired vision, rashes and asthma, reports Pesticide Action Network North America. A study published by the Netherlands' Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment The Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment (Ministerie van Sociale Zaken en Werkgelegenheid; SZW) is the Dutch ministry of social affairs: it is occupied with employment, relations between employers and employees, the system of social security and the emancipation of  reports that Dutch floral workers are exposed to pesticide concentrations up to 60 times the amount considered safe.

Dr. Marion Moses of the San Francisco-based Pesticide Education Center says that many of the pesticides in use are highly toxic highly toxic Occupational medicine adjective Referring to a chemical that 1. Has a median lethal dose–LD50 of ≤ 50 mg/kg when administered orally to 200-300 g albino rats 2. . "One of the chemicals widely used in greenhouses for flowers is Temik [aldicarb aldicarb /al·di·carb/ (al´di-kahrb) a carbamate pesticide used as an insecticide; in some countries, also used as a rodenticide.

aldicarb

a carbamate pesticide.
], and that has caused serious problems." Methyl bromide--an ozone-destroyer and a Category I acute toxin, among the most dangerous toxic substances known--is also heavily used in Latin America and the U.S. on flower crops, according to WRI's Lori Ann Thrupp. "Unlike food products, flowers are not inspected for pesticide residues by importers, so producers have relatively little concern," she explains.

The industry defends its reliance on pesticides. The Society of American Florists' Jennifer Sparks says most pesticides used are low in toxicity and have a short residual life. "In Colombia, flower growers can only use pesticides approved in the U.S.," says Sparks. The Florist Review's David Coake admits he hasn't followed the issue closely. "We don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 too much about pesticides, but we've heard there's not a problem," he says.

Consumers concerned about pesticide-doused flowers have a right to be, says Richard Wiles wile  
n.
1. A stratagem or trick intended to deceive or ensnare.

2. A disarming or seductive manner, device, or procedure: the wiles of a skilled negotiator.

3. Trickery; cunning.
, vice president of research for the Environmental Working Group (EWG EWG Environmental Working Group
EWG Europäische Wirtschaftsgemeinschaft (German: European Economic Community)
EWG Expert Working Group
EWG Executive Working Group
EWG Electron-Withdrawing Group
EWG UN/EDIFACT Working Group
). According to a 1997 EWG study, California-grown roses had 1,000 times the level of cancer-causing pesticides as comparable food products. Wiles says that consumers are buying roses that, their toxicity levels suggest, should be handled by workers wearing protective gear. Testing the leaves and petals of roses from California, New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E). , Colorado, Canada and Colombia, EWG found two probable human carcinogens Carcinogens
Substances in the environment that cause cancer, presumably by inducing mutations, with prolonged exposure.

Mentioned in: Colon Cancer, Rectal Cancer
; three Category I pesticides (the most hazardous); and three neurotoxins--at up to 50 times the amount allowed in food.

Dr. Terril Nell, professor of floriculture at the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. , argues that pesticide misuse is not as prevalent as some researchers suggest. "[Growers] have an incentive not to overapply pesticides," simply because they're so expensive, he says. He does agree the industry could make more use of Integrated Pest Management Integrated Pest Management (IPM), planned program that coordinates economically and environmentally acceptable methods of pest control with the judicious and minimal use of toxic pesticides.  (natural insecticides, organic methods and biological controls) to reduce pesticide use. Wiles thinks the problem is more basic than that. "Rose growers have repeatedly failed to adopt even the most rudimentary advances in pesticide management practices," he says.

High demand puts pressure on the often-antiquated ships, delivery trucks and planes that transport the flowers, and results in both air and water pollution. In Colombia, one 35-ton cargo plane takes off every three hours to fly the country's flowers to overseas markets. Researchers have witnessed some pesticides running undiluted right into the ground when spilled, or else suffusing the water table after repeated outdoor sprayings. The Netherlands, long famous as the global "flower capital" has heavily contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 water and air in its flower-growing regions, report Dorren and Maharaj. Water use is so intense that in developing regions, ground water levels have sunk and rivers have dwindled. A dismal lack of wastewater treatment, acknowledged by Nell, poses additional threats to regional water supplies.

Thrupp says part of the problem lies in unrestricted markets: If countries like the U.S. were to set guidelines for flower residues, producers would have incentives to lower their chemical use. Some European countries are already establishing cooperatives with growers concerned about pesticide use and workers' health.

Lynn Byczynski, author of The Flower Farmer, says that organically-grown flowers are another sustainable option, available at local farmers' markets or natural food stores. But she notes that consumers should ask where flowers originate and how they were grown, as she found pesticide-laden chrysanthemums at a natural foods chain. CONTACT: California Cut Flower Commission, 11344 Coloma Road, Suite 450, Gold River, CA 95670/(916)852-5166; Environmental Working Group, 1718 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20009/(202)667-6982.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:flower farms using unregistered pesticides
Author:Rembert, Tracey C.
Publication:E
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:May 1, 1999
Words:963
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