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USDA’s National Institute for Food and Agriculture (NIFA)

SOCAR Review

Federal Funds Available to Document Environmental Services of Organic Agriculture

Tuesday, Jun 07, 2011

 


SCOAR is a collaboration of producers and scientists whose mission is to plan and promote research and information exchange for understanding and improving organic agricultural systems.


Federal Funds Available to Document
Environmental Services of Organic Agriculture

USDA’s National Institute for Food and Agriculture (NIFA) has released its request for applications for the Organic Transitions program....

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by THE SCOOP 3

this is were it post

Edited on
Wednesday, Sep 08, 2010

Key Discovery Strengthens Linkage Between Pesticide Use and Colony Collapse Disorder

Scientists around the world have been trying to identify the risk factors driving honeybee Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). There is near-universal agreement that the problem remains severe; many factors can trigger CCD, and of these, several appear to depend on a weakened bee immune system; and, exposure to pesticides, and in particular the persistent, systemic nicotinyl insecticides are likely to be involved in many CCD episodes.

In an important breakthrough, scientists in Europe have discovered a major new, widespread exposure pathway through which bees are ingesting nicotinyl insecticides in virtually all intensively farmed regions - honeybee sources of drinking water. In October, 2009 at a scientific meeting in Paris, Hedwig Riebe summarized recent research on this new exposure pathway (Riebe, 2009).

In the morning and throughout the growing season, essentially all plants emit water in the form of guttation drops. Guttation drops come from inside plant cells, and can carry with them, into the outside world, natural or man-made chemicals that are present in plant cells, such as residues of systemic pesticides that have moved, as they are designed to do, throughout plant tissues. The latest results from European research found 20 parts per billion of nicotinyl insecticides in guttation droplets, almost certainly enough to deliver a dangerous dose to nearby bees.

Inside hives during warm spring and summer nights, bees are hard at work fanning the hive with their wings to help keep the queen comfortable and the brood safe. Each morning at first flight, the bees are dehydrated and thirsty, and seek out a nearby source of moisture. The drops on leaves in nearby fields, typically a mixture of moisture from guttation and dew, are a favorite first stop and common source of hydration. If the field was planted to a seed treated with a nicotinyl insecticide, or if the field/crop has been sprayed with a nicotinyl, the bees will be exposed to some level of systemic nicotinyl insecticide.

In some cases this exposure will prove deadly, as documented in 2009 European research. In other sub-acute exposure cases, the bees ingest enough nicotinyl to weaken their immune system, or disrupt their sense of direction and ability to navigate, or both. These sub-acute impacts are widely recognized factors contributing to or occuring during CCD.

Source: "Exposition Paths of Neonicotinoids," Dr. Hedwig Riebe, DBID, Paris, France, October 12, 2009. Posted at - http://www.organic-center.org/science.pest.php?action=view&report_id=161

Sustainability of the Dairy Industry

The Center's new, vastly improved dairy sector environmental footprint calculator is now being beta-tested by our technical team and we are putting the finishing touches on the model and documentation. A first report based on results from the calculator will be out this spring.

This is going to be an extremely valuable tool that will likely be among the models used to benchmark and track the environmental footprint of conventional and organic dairy farms.

Since joining the Organic Center's Board, George Siemon, CEO of Organic Valley, has highlighted cow health and longevity on organic and conventional farms as one of the most significant factors driving the relative performance and impacts of dairy farms. With the new calculator, the impacts of cow health are crystal clear, and significant, as George predicted.

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JUICE OF LIFE

Submitted by: JODY KROPF


The Juice of life

3 lager carrots
1 large tomato
1 large slice Pineapple
3 piece celery
1 large piece ginger
½ pepper red

1 bunch kale
1 bunch parsley
1 bunch cilantro
1 nice piece beet
1 bunch spinach
1 bunch Basil
1 apple
Garnish with Bee Pollen

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Evan Rotman didn’t get on the culinary train until his early 20’s, but ever since then, he has not looked back.Born in Southern California, and moving to the glorious bay area in his teens gave him a good understanding of all that is good in life. He still claims that it was living near San Francisco that made him appreciate fine things.

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