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	<title>건강과 대안 &#187; Pesticides</title>
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		<title>[GMO] 몬산토의 Bt독소 옥수수 실패, 저항성 해충 증가로 살충제 사용량 늘어</title>
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		<comments>http://www.chsc.or.kr/?post_type=reference&#038;p=4117#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jun 2013 19:32:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>건강과대안</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[GMO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[식품 · 의약품]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bt독소]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pesticides]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The giant agri-business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[몬산토]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[살충제]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[옥수수]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[유전자조작]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[초국적 농식품독점기업]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[몬산토는 western corn rootworm를 죽이는 독소를 생산하는 유전자조작 옥수수인&#160;Bt 옥수수를개발하여 살충제의 사용량이 줄어들었다고 주장하고 있으나&#8230;&#160;Bt 독소에도 죽지않는 저항성벌레(western corn rootworm)들이 많이 늘어나&#160;경제적 손실이 발생하자 옥수수 경작자들이살충제 사용량을 대폭 [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>몬산토는 western corn rootworm를 죽이는 독소를 생산하는 유전자조작 옥수수인&nbsp;Bt 옥수수를<BR>개발하여 살충제의 사용량이 줄어들었다고 주장하고 있으나&#8230;&nbsp;Bt 독소에도 죽지않는 저항성<BR>벌레(western corn rootworm)들이 많이 늘어나&nbsp;경제적 손실이 발생하자 옥수수 경작자들이<BR>살충제 사용량을 대폭 늘리고 있다는&nbsp;최근 뉴스입니다.<BR><BR>전문가들은 유전자조작&nbsp;Bt 옥수수 재배와 살충제&nbsp;사용을 늘리는 것은 도박판의 판돈을<BR>키우는 것이나 마찬가지라고 경고하고 있으나&#8230; 거대 농식품기업(The giant agri-business)&nbsp; <BR>몬산토는 오히려 농민들에게 조삼모사와 같은 방식을 제안하고 있습니다. <BR><BR>몬산토 사는 농민들에게 몬산토의&nbsp;특허 종자 제품(product)들을 이용하여 작물(crops)과&nbsp;&nbsp;<BR>특성(traits)을 순환시키라고 권유하고 있습니다. 몬산토사가 개발한 유전자조작 씨앗을<BR>제외한 모든 생물체를 죽여버리는 라운드업 제품과 식물 내부에서&nbsp; 독소를 분비하여 식물을<BR>갉아먹는 벌레를 죽이는 Bt 제품을 번갈아 사용하면 좋다면서 몬산토 입장에서 화수분처럼<BR>끊임없이 이윤이 발생하는 &#8216;꽃놀이패&#8217;를 권유하고 있는 셈입니다.<BR><BR>몬산토 사는 이와 더불어 농민들에게 자사가 개발한 2중 기능제품(dual of mode action<BR>&nbsp;products)을 구입하라고 권유하고 있습니다.<BR><BR>이 방식도 몬산토사 입장에서는 끊임없이 이윤이 발생하는 &#8216;꽃놀이패&#8217;이지만&#8230; 농민들의<BR>입장에서는 비싼 특허 씨앗을 구입하는 비용과 생산량 감소로 인해서 끊임없이 경제적 <BR>손실이 발생하는&nbsp;최악의 상황에 처할 가능성이 높은 셈입니다.<BR><BR><HEADER class=post-header sizset="9" sizcache036207307605644823="48">&nbsp;=========================<br />
<H1 class=post-title>Corn Growers Turn to Pesticides After Genetically Modified Seeds Fail </H1><SPAN class=post-byline sizset="9" sizcache036207307605644823="48">By <A class="" title="More posts by Dan Flynn" href="http://www.foodsafetynews.com/author/danflynn/">Dan Flynn</A> | <BR><BR><TIME class=post-date>Food Safety News May 28, 2013</TIME></SPAN> <BR><A href="http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2013/05/corn-growers-turn-to-pesticides-after-genetically-modified-seeds-fail/">http://www.foodsafetynews.com/2013/05/corn-growers-turn-to-pesticides-after-genetically-modified-seeds-fail/</A><BR><BR></HEADER><SECTION class=post-content sizset="10" sizcache036207307605644823="48"><br />
<P>The $1 billion pest has done it before. It beat crop rotation during the 1990s when a new strain of the western corn rootworm began breeding opposite fields so they’d be ready for corn planting in the following year. “Up until then rotation of corn and soybeans was a pretty good control strategy,” University of Illinois entomologist Michael Gray told <STRONG>Food Safety News.</STRONG></P><br />
<P>After that came the controversial genetically modified Bt seeds–from Monsanto and licensed to others—that came with built-in toxins to slay the destructive corn rootworm. &nbsp;And everyone from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that approved them to Monsanto who developed them to Land Grant universities who monitor the performance of American agriculture—all said use of the Bt seeds would reduce pesticide use.</P><br />
<P sizset="10" sizcache036207307605644823="48"><A class="" href="http://www.foodsafetynews.com/files/2013/05/cornfield_406x250.jpg"><IMG class="alignright size-medium wp-image-70540" title=cornfield_406x250 height=184 alt="" src="http://www.foodsafetynews.com/files/2013/05/cornfield_406x250-300x184.jpg" width=300></A><BR><BR>Herbicide-tolerant and Bt-transgenic crops did result in some reduced pesticide use. Charles Benbrook at Washington State University’s Center for Sustaining Agriculture and Natural Resources figures Bt crops reduced insecticide use by 10-12 million pounds annually in the period from 1996 to 2011. There is USDA data showing an even more dramatic decline.</P><br />
<P>But in the last couple years, the billion dollar pest with a new immunity has begun striking back against Monsanto’s Bt seed. And America’s corn farmers—who are planting a near record 97.3 million acres this year—are responding with the only weapon in their arsenal by dramatically upping their pesticide use.</P><br />
<P>Any reduction now looks to be history. Coming off two extraordinary years when acres dedicated to corn produced $77 and nearly $80 billion, respectively, in 2011 and 2012 with corn prices of $6.22 and $7.40 per bushel, growers are not pulling back and pesticides are now one of their big “inputs” in the corn crop.</P><br />
<P>Even though $2 corn was a reality as recently as 2005, they see too many competing uses for their product to be gloomy about the future. Beverages, high fructose corn syrup, starch, cereals and sweeteners are among uses of corn in food. Corn-fed beef, poultry, pork and dairy are its principal feed uses. And then on the fuel front ethanol demands are around 500 million bushels of corn.</P><br />
<P>More pesticide bought to control another break-out of the western corn rootworm is seen by most growers as just a little more insurance, according to both Gray and Benbrook. Gray, who discovered severe rootworm injury in a Cass County, IL cornfield in June 2012, says most growers made decisions about pesticide use this year based on their harvest experiences last fall.</P><br />
<P>Earlier in 2013, Gray meet with Illinois corn and soybean growers at five locations in the state. He used hand-held “clickers’ to survey growers, finding on average 92 percent planned to plant a Bt hybrid for corn rootworm protection in 2013, but on average 46.66 percent also plan to apply insecticides at planting.</P><br />
<P>After his meetings with almost 600 Illinois growers, Gray predicted the sharp increase in planting-time soil insecticides with corn rootworm Bt hybrids. Last week, that prediction was verified with the Wall Street Journal reporting surging insecticide sales for companies like American Vanguard Corp. and Syngenta AG.</P><br />
<P>Corn growers, according to Gray, are “covering their bets” by upping their pesticide use while sticking with a Bt hybrid for corn rootworm. Benbrook agrees growers are “all in in their bet on corn.”</P><br />
<P>Gray’s work with Illinois corn growers even brought a response from Monsanto last year. The giant agri-business suggested growers using their product should rotate their crops and traits, and buy their dual of mode action products. At this point, Monsanto’s dominance in America’s cornfields is not threatened. That could change if one of its topline products is breaking down.</P><br />
<P>For 2013, more acres have been planted with genetically modified corn than ever, and its being planted with more pesticides than in more than a decade. USDA’s current forecast for harvest time is for corn selling for around $4.50 a bushel.</P><br />
<P>That would be enough to cover the “inputs” and clear a profit. Droughts or disease that reduce yields could increase prices. Memories of last fall’s corn futures of $8.50 continue to dance in the heads of growers.</P><br />
<P>With more than 40 states contributing to the U.S, corn crop, growers continue to have significant political clout. They no longer get direct payment from the USDA if prices go south, but the taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance program takes up the slack.</P></p>
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		<title>[식품안전] 주의력결핍 과잉행동 장애(ADHD), 음식물 속 농약섭취와 관련</title>
		<link>http://www.chsc.or.kr/?post_type=reference&#038;p=2014</link>
		<comments>http://www.chsc.or.kr/?post_type=reference&#038;p=2014#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2010 10:38:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>건강과대안</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[식품 · 의약품]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ADHD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Organophosphates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pesticides]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[농약]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[주의력결핍 과잉행동 장애]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#8216;주의력결핍 과잉행동 장애&#8217;(attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD)가 음식물을 통한 농약섭취와 밀접한 관련이 있다는 연구결과가 몬트리올대학교(the University of Montreal)와 하바드대학교(Harvard University의 공동연구팀에 의해&#160;발표되었습니다.이번 연구를 주도한&#160;몬트리올대학교의 메리세 부차드(Maryse Bouchard ) 박사팀은 의학전문지인 [...]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><P>&#8216;주의력결핍 과잉행동 장애&#8217;(attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD)가 음식물을 통한 농약섭취와 밀접한 관련이 있다는 연구결과가 몬트리올대학교(the University of Montreal)와 하바드대학교(Harvard University의 공동연구팀에 의해&nbsp;발표되었습니다.<BR><BR>이번 연구를 주도한&nbsp;몬트리올대학교의 메리세 부차드(Maryse Bouchard ) 박사팀은 의학전문지인 &#8216;소아과학&#8217;(journal <I>Pediatrics)</I> 에 연구결과를 기고했습니다.<BR><BR>채소와 과일에 함유된 유기인제 농약(organophosphates)을 많이 섭취한 어린이들이 주의력결핍 과잉행동 장애(ADHD) 질환에 걸린 비율이 높았다고&nbsp;합니다. </P><br />
<P>연구팀은 8세에서 15세 사이의 어린이 1,139명에게서 소변 샘플을 채취해 농약 섭취량을 분석한 뒤 ADHD 질환에 걸렸는지 여부를 비교했다고 합니다.&nbsp;</P><br />
<P>비교 결과 농약 섭취량이 가장 낮은 집단보다 10배 많은 농약을 섭취한 어린이 집단의 경우 ADHD에 걸렸을 가능성이 55% 높은 것으로&nbsp;나왔습니다. <BR><BR>SOURCES: Maryse Bouchard, Ph.D., adjunct researcher, department of environmental and occupational health, University of Montreal and Sainte-Justine University Hospital Centre, Canada; Nakia Scott, M.D., clinical assistant professor, psychiatry and behavioral science, Texas A&#038;M Health Science Center College of Medicine, and child psychiatrist, Lone Star Circle of Care, College Station, Texas; June 2010 <I>Pediatrics</I><BR></P><br />
<H1>Study: A Link Between Pesticides and ADHD</H1><br />
<DIV class=byline sizset="37" sizcache="1469">By <SPAN class=name sizset="37" sizcache="1469"><A id=emailWriter href="http://www.time.com/time/letters/email_letter.html"><FONT color=#000000><STRONG>Alice Park</STRONG></FONT></A><STRONG> <BR></STRONG></SPAN><SPAN class=date><FONT color=#999999><BR>출처 : 타임(Time) Monday, May. 17, 2010<BR><A href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989564,00.html?xid=rss-topstories">http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989564,00.html?xid=rss-topstories</A><BR><BR><br />
<DIV id=TixyyLink style="BORDER-RIGHT: medium none; BORDER-TOP: medium none; OVERFLOW: hidden; BORDER-LEFT: medium none; COLOR: #000000; BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; BACKGROUND-COLOR: transparent; TEXT-ALIGN: left; TEXT-DECORATION: none"><br />
<P sizset="0" sizcache="3143">Studies linking environmental substances to <A href="http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1989138,00.html" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>disease</FONT></A> are coming fast and furious. Chemicals in <A href="http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1976909_1976908_1976938,00.html" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>plastics and common household goods</FONT></A> have been associated with serious developmental problems, while a long inventory of <A href="http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1976909_1976895_1976914,00.html" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>other hazards</FONT></A> are contributing to rising rates of modern ills: heart disease, obesity, diabetes, autism.</P><br />
<P sizset="59" sizcache="1686">Add attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to the list. A new study in the journal <I>Pediatrics</I> associates exposure to pesticides with cases of ADHD in the U.S. and Canada. In the U.S. alone, an estimated 4.5 million children ages 5 to 17 have been diagnosed with ADHD, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and rates of diagnosis have risen 3% a year between 1997 and 2006. Increasingly, research suggests that chemical influences, perhaps in combination with other environmental factors — like video games, hyperkinetically edited TV shows and flashing images in educational DVDs aimed at infants — may be contributing to the increase in attention problems.<SPAN class=see sizset="59" sizcache="1686"><A href="http://www.time.com/time/photoessays/2006/autismschool/" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>(See pictures of a school for autistic children.)</FONT></A></SPAN></P><br />
<P>Led by Maryse Bouchard in Montreal, researchers based at the University of Montreal and Harvard University examined the potential relationship between ADHD and exposure to certain toxic pesticides called organophosphates. The team analyzed the levels of pesticide residue in the urine of more than 1,100 children ages 8 to 15 and found that those with the highest levels of dialkyl phosphates, which are the breakdown products of organophosphate pesticides, had the highest incidence of ADHD. Overall, they found a 35% increase in the odds of developing ADHD with every tenfold increase in urinary concentration of the pesticide residue. The effect was seen even at the low end of exposure: kids who had any detectable, above-average level of the most common pesticide metabolite in their urine were twice as likely as those with undetectable levels to record symptoms of the learning disorder.</P><br />
<P sizset="60" sizcache="1686">&#8220;I was quite surprised to see an effect at lower levels of exposure,&#8221; says Bouchard, who used data on ADHD from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, a long-term study of health parameters of a representative sample of U.S. citizens.<SPAN class=see sizset="60" sizcache="1686"><A href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1887486,00.html" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>(See how fidgeting can actually help kids with ADHD.)</FONT></A></SPAN></P><br />
<P sizset="61" sizcache="1686">Bouchard&#8217;s analysis is the first to home in on organophosphate pesticides as a potential contributor to ADHD in young children. But the author stresses that her study uncovers only an association, not a direct causal link between pesticide exposure and the developmental condition. There is evidence, however, that the mechanism of the link may be worth studying further: organophosphates are known to cause damage to the nerve connections in the brain — that&#8217;s how they kill agricultural pests, after all. The chemical works by disrupting a specific neurotransmitter, acetylcholinesterase, a defect that has been implicated in children diagnosed with ADHD. In animal models, exposure to the pesticides has resulted in hyperactivity and cognitive deficits as well. <SPAN class=see sizset="61" sizcache="1686"><A href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989564,00.html#comments" target=_blank><FONT color=#000000>(Comment on this story.)</FONT></A></SPAN></P><br />
<P>&#8220;I am very confident in the correlation in this study, because we controlled for quite a few things that we thought could play a role,&#8221; says Bouchard. &#8220;Adjusting for those things did not change the results very much. Which indicates that there is very little potential for confounding in this association between pesticides and ADHD.&#8221;</P><br />
<P>The results call for additional studies to determine exactly which foods and which residential uses of pesticides may be most likely to lead to harm in children. Although Bouchard&#8217;s study did not determine the exact method of exposure in the participants, youngsters are most likely to ingest the chemicals through their diet — by eating fruits and vegetables that have been sprayed while growing — according to the National Academy of Sciences. The study also raises the possibility of setting a national threshold for safe levels of exposure; the study authors note that according to the U.S. Pesticide Residue Program report, organophosphates were detected in 28% of frozen blueberries and in 19% of celery samples tested for pesticides. It is not clear whether those levels pose a threat to cognitive function in children, but the current study&#8217;s findings suggest it may be wise to figure that out.</P><br />
<P>In the meantime, Bouchard suggests that concerned parents try to avoid using bug sprays in the home and to feed their children organically grown fruits and vegetables, if possible. (Otherwise, parents should be careful to scrub all produce to reduce residue.) While pesticide-free fruits and greens may be more costly, Bouchard says they may be worth the price in terms of future health.</P><BR><BR>Read more: <A href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989564,00.html?xid=rss-topstories#ixzz0oElQ3u00"><FONT color=#000000>http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989564,00.html?xid=rss-topstories#ixzz0oElQ3u00</FONT></A><BR></DIV></FONT></SPAN></DIV><BR><BR>=========================<BR>Pesticides tied to ADHD in children in U.S. study<BR><BR>출처 : 로이터통신 <STRONG><FONT color=#008000>May 17 11:23 AM</FONT></STRONG> <BR><BR><br />
<DIV class=yn-story-content><br />
<P>NEW YORK (Reuters) – Children exposed to pesticides known as organophosphates could have a higher risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to a U.S. study that urges parents to always wash produce thoroughly.</P><br />
<P>Researchers tracked the pesticides&#8217; breakdown products in children&#8217; urine and found those with high levels were almost twice as likely to develop ADHD as those with undetectable levels.</P><br />
<P>The findings are based on data from the general U.S. population, meaning that exposure to the pesticides could be harmful even at levels commonly found in children&#8217;s environment.</P><br />
<P>&#8220;There is growing concern that these pesticides may be related to ADHD,&#8221; said researcher Marc Weisskopf of the <SPAN class=yshortcuts id=lw_1274139509_0>Harvard School of Public Health</SPAN>, who worked on the study.</P><br />
<P>&#8220;What this paper specifically highlights is that this may be true even at low concentrations.&#8221;</P><br />
<P>Organophosphates were originally developed for chemical warfare, and they are known to be toxic to the nervous system.</P><br />
<P>There are about 40 <SPAN class=yshortcuts id=lw_1274139509_1 style="CURSOR: hand; BORDER-BOTTOM: #366388 2px dotted">organophosphate pesticides</SPAN> such as malathion registered in the United States, the researchers wrote in the journal Pediatrics.</P><br />
<P>Weisskopf said the compounds have been linked to behavioral symptoms common to ADHD &#8212; for instance, impulsivity and attention problems &#8212; but exactly how is not fully understood.</P><br />
<P>Although the researchers had no way to determine the source of the breakdown products they found, Weisskopf said the most likely culprits were pesticides and insecticides used on produce and indoors.</P><br />
<P>Garry Hamlin of <SPAN class=yshortcuts id=lw_1274139509_2>Dow AgroSciences</SPAN>, which manufactures an organophosphate known as chlorpyrifos, said he had not had time to read the report closely.</P><br />
<P>But, he added&#8221; &#8220;the results reported in the paper don&#8217;t establish any association specific to our product chlorpyrifos.&#8221;</P><br />
<P>Weisskopf and colleagues&#8217; sample included 1,139 children between 8 and 15 years. They interviewed the children&#8217;s mothers, or another caretaker, and found that about one in 10 met the criteria for ADHD, which jibes with estimates for the general population.</P><br />
<P>After accounting for factors such as gender, age and race, they found the odds of having ADHD rose with the level of pesticide breakdown products.</P><br />
<P>For a 10-fold increase in one class of those compounds, the odds of ADHD increased by more than half. And for the most common breakdown product, called dimethyl triophosphate, the odds of ADHD almost doubled in kids with above-average levels compared to those without detectable levels.</P><br />
<P>&#8220;That&#8217;s a very strong association that, if true, is of very serious concern,&#8221; said Weisskopf. &#8220;These are widely used pesticides.&#8221;</P><br />
<P>He emphasized that more studies are needed, especially following exposure levels over time, before contemplating a ban on the pesticides. Still, he urged parents to be aware of what insecticides they were using around the house and to wash produce.</P><br />
<P>&#8220;A good washing of <SPAN class=yshortcuts id=lw_1274139509_3 style="BACKGROUND: none transparent scroll repeat 0% 0%; CURSOR: hand; BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none">fruits and vegetables</SPAN> before one eats them would definitely help a lot,&#8221; he said.</P><br />
<P>(Reporting by Reuters Health, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)</P></DIV></p>
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