USDA researchers have identified the neonicotinoid insecticide
clothianidin as a likely contributor to monarch butterfly declines in
North America.
The USDA research is published in the journal Science of Nature and was published online on 3rd April (Pecenka and Lundgren 2015).
Monarch butterfly populations (Danaus Plexippus)
have declined precipitously in North America in the last twenty years.
This decline has commonly been linked to loss of milkweeds (Asclepias species) from farmer's fields.
Monarch
caterpillars are dependent on milkweeds. The ability of farmers to kill
them with the Monsanto herbicide Roundup (glyphosate) has therefore led
to this herbicide being considered as a major contributor to the
decline of the monarch butterfly.
However, industrial farming
methods include other known or potential causes of monarch
disappearances. One of these is the known toxicity of Bt insecticides
found in GMO crops.
For instance, in 2006 pollen from Syngenta's BT176 corn (no longer on the US market) was shown to have a lethal dose of 14 pollen grains towards caterpillars of European Swallowtail butterflies.
Pollen from GMO crops falls on the milkweeds where monarchs feed and individual maize plants produce millions of pollen grains.
'Neonic' pesticides - toxic to caterpillars at 1 part per billion
Neonicotinoids have been strongly implicated in pollinator declines worldwide, as shown by a report from a task force of the International Union of Nature Conservation based in Switzerland.
These
pesticides, such as clothianidin (Bayer), are a particular hazard
because, unlike most pesticides, they are water-soluble molecules.
From
soil or seed treatments they can reach nectar and are found in pollen.
They are now the most widely used pesticides in the world (Goulson
2013). Up to now there has been negligible research on the effects of
neonicotinoids on butterflies and this new research is therefore the
first to link neonicotinoids to the survival and reproduction of any
butterfly.
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