I’ve been growing grapes, cherries, and other crops for 45 years in western New York. I grew up on a farm and hope to pass it along to my daughter, who has been farming with me since graduating from college five years ago. Our business is to grow top-quality produce. To do this, we must protect, preserve, and restore the environment that provides for my family’s future and yours.
Pollinators are part of this environment. We are dependent on bees for crop production and many bird species for insect control. State legislators say they’re trying to protect birds and bees by banning neonicotinoid insecticides (neonics for short), but their proposals will hurt them – with a ripple effect of making food more expensive and threatening local growers.
State Sen. Brad Hoylman’s proposed “Birds and Bees Protection Act” intends to ban neonicotinoid seed treatments, which are among the most environmentally safe methods of application for crops. Neonic-coated seeds are pretreated with chemicals farmers need to grow a healthy crop, without spraying pesticide into the environment. This protects plants from bugs that mainly feed on the leaves and stems of treated plants.
Assemblyman William Colton’s newly proposed bill (A02097) would amend New York’s environmental conservation law to fully ban any other form of neonicotinoid application, affecting our state’s fruit, vegetable and nursery growers.
Without neonics, farmers will be forced to apply sprays of different pesticides more often to get similar levels of insect control.
Neonics, which are 25 to 30 years old, are relatively new compared with the two other major insecticide groups, carbamates and pyrethroids. Over time, insects have developed a tolerance and resistance to these older chemicals. This forces us to increase the rate and number of applications when using them. This adds more pressure on pollinators and bird populations.
This exact issue has been playing out in Europe. According to one report, farmers sprayed 2.4 times per hectare each season on average before Europe’s neonic ban. After the ban, European farmers sprayed pesticides 3.6 times on average, mostly with pyrethroids. This translates to 1.145 million additional applications reported by farmers. Similar scenarios will play out in New York.
I hate spraying. It’s a time-consuming, expensive, dirty job. I would love to spend my time and money differently. But there is nothing more frustrating than spending time and money on a pesticide that didn’t work because of timing, weather, or resistance – or because it just did a poor job.
Categories: Nebraska, Crops, Fruits and Vegetables, Rural Lifestyle