Beleid en debat

Ctgb legt beperkende voorwaarden op aan gebruik metam-natrium

Het College voor de toelating van gewasbeschermingsmiddelen en biociden (Ctgb) stelt vanaf 25 augustus beperkende voorwaarden aan het gebruik van middelen op basis van metam- natrium. Met deze nieuwe aanvullende voorwaarden wordt voldaan aan het beschermingsniveau voor omwonenden en in het bijzonder die voor kinderen. Naar aanleiding van de schorsing van 28 mei 2014 van de toelating van de metam-natrium houdende gewasbeschermingsmiddelen, heeft de toelatinghouder nieuwe wetenschappelijke informatie aangeleverd. Daarnaast heeft de toelatinghouder, vanwege een herregistratie, dezelfde informatie aangeleverd aan de Belgische toelatingsautoriteit. De beoordeling van de gegevens heeft dan ook in nauwe samenspraak met België plaatsgevonden. Hieruit blijkt dat de betreffende middelen veilig kunnen worden gebruikt met aanvullende, strikte voorwaarden; namelijk: Een onbehandelde bufferzone van 150 meter tussen behandeld perceel en de kadastrale grens van woningen en overige verblijfsplaatsen waar mensen langere tijd verblijven, zoals winkels, scholen, bedrijven en kantoren; Afdekking van het perceel direct na behandeling voor minstens 14 dagen met virtually impermeable film (VIF); Inbrengen op tenminste 20 centimeter diepte; Maximaal te behandelen areaal van 1 hectare, met minimaal 150 meter afstand tussen behandelde velden.

The dramatic decline of amphibians - an alarm call for us that something is drastically wrong with the environment

Since the 1980s, there has been a worldwide decline in the population of amphibians – frogs, toads and salamanders. For a while, biologists were skeptical that these declines were anything more than natural variations. However, study after study has revealed that the amphibian decline is a real and severe threat to biodiversity. Roughly half of amphibian species have decreasing populations, a third are globally threatened, and almost 500 species are critically endangered. The causes for this dramatic die-off appear to be varied. Some studies have concluded that farm pesticides are a major culprit. Other studies have identified a type of chytrid fungus that causes skin infections as a major contributor to the worldwide decline.

The pintail is now the fastest declining dabbling duck in the UK

The pintail (Anas acuta) could be the latest addition to wildfowl conservation priorities after new figures from WWT and others show numbers have fallen by more than half since 2006. The findings are published in Waterbirds in the UK, the annual report of the Wetland Bird Survey, which counts all waterbirds on the UK’s major wetlands. Pintail is an elegant dabbling duck much loved by artists, including WWT founder Sir Peter Scott who named his daughter Dafila after its former scientific name. The recorded decline is especially worrying as up to half of all the pintail in northwest Europe rely on the UK’s estuaries and wetlands during winter. WWT’s Head of Species Monitoring, Richard Hearn, said: “Counts like the Wetland Bird Survey are our ‘canary in the cage’. Without them, we wouldn’t spot the risks till it was too late. The decline we’ve seen in pintail is ringing alarm bells. However, further research across its flyway could yet throw up more hopeful news. The key thing is that there’s still time to act.”

The systemic loss of nature in Britain becomes the truth that dare not speak its name

If you go down to the woods today, you may not be guaranteed to see too many birds but you could well bump into a census-taking birdwatcher. The Biological Records Centre celebrated its 50th anniversary this summer and citizen science flourishes in Britain as never before. If one needs proof, look no further than the proliferation of published bird atlases, in which every single scrap of data has been sourced from the fields and woods by volunteers and then donated freely to the atlas editors. The resulting books are among the most compelling statements of our nation’s amateur fixation with nature. Individual fieldworkers, monitoring their local birds in selected two-kilometre squares (known in atlas parlance as “tetrads”), have been able, because of new data-processing software, to contribute to the national overview and to the finer-grain regional picture. Between them, the tens of thousands of observers have assembled an astonishing 19 million records. In the process, they have made Britain’s birds the most thoroughly documented avifauna on the planet. Yet the story they reveal is deeply troubling. Never before have we known in so much detail how badly some of our birds are faring. The grey partridge, which was once found nationwide and whose overall numbers were calculated in seven figures, has sunk towards national extinction. Today, there may be fewer than 75,000 pairs and the decline continues.

Kleine Anfrage der Abgeordneten Harald Ebner et al. zur Gefährdung von Bestäuberinsekten, Vögeln und weiterer Organismen durch systemische Pestizidwirkstoffe

Neuere Forschungsergebnisse zur Gefährdung von Bestäuberinsekten, Vögeln und weiterer Organismen durch systemische Pestizidwirkstoffe (insbesondere Neonicotinoide) und der sich daraus ergebende Handlungsbedarf für Regulierung und Forschung.

Tussen 2003 en 2010 is het aantal duurzame boeren in de EU vertienvoudigd

Elk jaar komen er 500.000 hectaren bij aan nieuwe biologische landbouwgrond. Dat blijkt uit de meest recente statistieken van de EU. Zowel het aantal biologische boerenbedrijven als het landbouwareaal groeide met meer dan 50 procent tussen 2003 en 2010. In 2011 had de EU 9,6 miljoen hectaren biologische landbouwgrond. In 2010 waren er 186.000 duurzame boerenbedrijven verdeeld over de 27 EU-landen. Biologische landbouw is gedefinieerd als voedselproductie met een minimale impact op het milieu door zo natuurlijk als mogelijk te opereren. De EU heeft diverse standaarden hiervoor die het gebruik van chemicaliën, pesticiden, kunstmest en medicijnen voor dieren reguleren. Genetisch gemodificeerde organismen mogen niet gebruikt worden in biologische landbouw.

Box turtles are in decline in the suburbs and rural areas around Montgomery County

Box turtles are amazing little animals. The word turtle usually equates to a reptile that primarily lives in water. However, box turtles spend the majority or all of their life on land. Being territorial, box turtles live in a designated area that provides them with food, water, shelter and places to raise young. They feed on a multitude of items, including worms, insects, fruits, berries, mushrooms, plants, fish, small animals and even occasionally carrion. Two or three decades ago, box turtles used to be fairly commonly observed in the suburbs and rural areas around Montgomery County, especially after a heavy spring or summer rain. Seeing three or four box turtles in a day was commonplace. Now, if you observe three or four a year you are lucky.

Massive tadpole die-off caused by ranavirus infection

More than 200,000 wood frog tadpoles died within 21 hours last year at a pond in Nat Wheelwright’s backyard in Brunswick, in what may be the largest and fastest mass death of tadpoles ever reported. The Bowdoin College biology professor is trying to find out why. This year, the wood frogs came back to Nat Wheelwright's pond, but there were no 1-year-old frogs breeding and the number of tadpoles was lower than previous years. “It was something I had never seen before,” said Wheelwright, who has studied the frogs in his yard for 28 years. “It was like a nuclear bomb went off.” The tadpoles were covered with red hemorrhages and tested positive for ranavirus, which likely caused the die-off, said Wheelwright.

Invertebrate numbers have fallen by nearly half over the last 35 years

The world's soaring human population has slashed the numbers of creepy crawlies a study has found. However, researchers say the demise of slugs, spiders and worms is not good news for us humans and could spark an explosion in pests. The study, published in the journal Science, revealed that as the human population has doubled over the last 35 years to now stand at more than seven billion, invertebrate numbers have fallen by nearly half over the same period. Experts fear this could have an effect on ecosystems as insects, spiders, crustaceans slug and worms play an important role in pollinating crops, pest control, decomposition and ensuring soil remains packed with nutrients, as well as water filtration. In the UK these two factors caused a massive reduction in the number of beetles, butterflies, bees and wasps, a 30-60 percent fall over 40 years, according to the study.

Once-common marine birds are disappearing from the coast of Washington and British Columbia

From white-winged scoters and surf scoters to long-tailed ducks, murres, loons and some seagulls, the number of everyday marine birds here has plummeted dramatically in recent decades. The reasons are often complex, but for many the loss of forage fish like herring might hold a clue. Bird surveys done by plane are tracking a significant ecological shift — a major decline in once-abundant marine birds. Scoters are down more than 75 percent from what they were in the late 1970s. Murres have dropped even more. Western grebes have mostly vanished, falling from several hundred thousand birds to about 20,000. Several new studies link many dwindling marine bird populations to what they eat — especially herring, anchovies, sand lance and surf smelt, the tiny swimmers often dubbed forage fish.