Herbicide Is What’s for Dinner

Via Nautilus

Driving down a grid road in central Saskatchewan, a machine that looks like a giant insect approaches me in a cloud of dust. The cab, hanging 8 feet above the road, is suspended by tires at least 6 feet tall, with wing-like appendages folded along each side. Should I drive around it or under it?

It is harvest season, and the high-clearance sprayer is on its way to desiccate a field. Desiccation may be the most widespread farming practice you’ve never heard of. Farmers desiccate by applying herbicide to their crops; this kills all the plants at the same time, making them uniformly dry and easier to cut. In essence, desiccation speeds up plant aging. Before desiccation, crops would have to dry out naturally at the end of the season. Today, there are examples of desiccation being applied to every type of conventional crop in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom.1 Chances are that most of what you ate today was harvested using a desiccant, but you’d never know.

Hart_BREAKER-1
The future: A fleet of combines harvests a field of desiccated peas on the Shewchuk farm near Saskatoon. The uniform senescence of the crop has made it dry, causing the combines to kick up chaff and dust as they work.

Mike Shewchuk jumps down from his swather as I pull into his farmyard. He is a young farmer whose blond brush cut and a robust stride would have not been out of place 50 years ago. Along with his dad, uncles, and brother, he farms 15,000 acres an hour outside of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. They recently received a century farm award, for having continuously farmed the land since the early 1900s.

He is in the middle of a cut, and asks if I would mind riding with him as we talk. I climb up beside him on a small fold-down seat.

Swathers are giant lawn mowers farmers use to cut crops. The cut plants are left to dry on the ground before combining. It can be tricky knowing when to cut. If you start too early, you’ll get too many green seeds. Depending on the crop, that might lead to early germination (wheat) or self-combustion (canola). But if you wait too long, you may be scraping your seeds off the ground after the snow melts.

I doubt that I’ll be able to tell which fields had been desiccated. But the shriveled, brown peas are in stark relief to the green fields around it.

Swathing is quickly going out of fashion, as most farmers desiccate to ripen their crops. One of the big agro-chemical companies even has a marketing campaign with the hashtag #sellyourswather, encouraging farmers to desiccate and ditch swathing altogether. I asked Mike why he hadn’t sold his swather yet.

He laughs. “We’re not desiccating canola, and canola is paying the bills right now.”

For many farmers, that is changing. Until recently, farmers did not desiccate canola because it “shattered” the seedpods, shedding the seeds in soil. But breeders have been busy: In 2017, five new varieties of shatter-resistant canola were released in Canada. That will make desiccation viable for Canada’s second-most common crop, and accelerate a trend that began around 10 years ago, when desiccation started to become popular.

Not coincidentally, it was also around then that herbicide use spiked. When you sit down to eat dinner today, there will probably be desiccant in your food.

There are thousands of ways to kill a weed. You can starve it, bleach it, mess with its proteins. You can feed it fake hormones. You can force it to make acid so that it disintegrates from within. There are more than 400 licensed weed killers, or herbicides, in Ontario alone. And we love to use them. Canadians used more than 58,000 tons in 2014, compared with only 21,000 tons in 1994. Our landscape, and our crops, have never been so saturated.

Our thirst for herbicides is partly due to GMOs like RoundupReady corn, soy, and canola. These herbicide-tolerant crops came on the market in the late 1990s, and changed the farming landscape by making it possible to control weeds by using herbicides on crops still in the field.

Herbicide resistance explains part of the increase in herbicide use around the world over the past decades. If you blast a weed with herbicide, eventually its cells become resistant. Farmers are left with fields of weeds they can’t kill. This is what happens in people, with antibiotic resistant bugs. Faced with resistant weeds, farmers double down, spraying even more and using multiple herbicides. But desiccation accounts for a significant part of the growth in herbicide use. It’s impossible to say precisely how much, because stats are tracked for herbicide use by crop—not by usage type.

In theory, anything that kills a plant can desiccate a crop, but farmers can only use herbicides that are licensed as desiccants. In practice, there are only a few that are regularly used.

Glyphosate is increasingly used as, or with, desiccants. It’s sold under the trade name RoundUp, and is the most commonly used herbicide in the world, as well as the most commonly used desiccant. In 1974, global use of glyphosate was 3,200 tons per year. It is expected to reach 1 million tons per year by 2020.1 In the U.S., the rate of growth has been accelerating. Between 1995 and 2004, glyphosate use grew by 356 percent. Between 2005 and 2014, it grew by 637 percent.2

Glyphosate works by interrupting protein synthesis in plants, rendering them unable to photosynthesize. It is also considered relatively safe for humans. But in 2015 the World Health Organization (WHO) declared it a possible carcinogen, on the basis of an independent survey of the scientific literature. Outrage from governments and industry around the world fueled a reanalysis by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and WHO, which concluded in 2016 that it was “unlikely to pose a carcinogenic risk to humans through diet.”

Industry, and farmers, breathed a sigh of relief. The reports analyzed, however, did not consider the increase in exposure to glyphosate via desiccation. This practice has dramatically increased the dissemination of glyphosate into the environment, and into us.

There have been no explicit tests of the effect of desiccation on our microbiome.

I asked Sheri Roberts, a crop specialist with Agriculture and Agrifood Canada in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, whether she thought desiccation was safe. She was reluctant to make the call, but said she wished it was not so commonly used. “The timing’s really tight,” she said. “If you don’t get it just right, that herbicide ends up in the grain.” If farmers apply a non-contact herbicide (like glyphosate) too early, it will be taken up by the growing plant and end up inside the seed. Non-contact herbicides are taken up by the living plant and incorporated into still growing tissues, while contact herbicides kill the tissues they touch.

A 2015 study by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency found glyphosate in 30 percent of 3,200 food products.3 Similar studies have found glyphosate exceeding maximum residue limits (or MRLs) in Cheerios, beer, and wine.4,5 MRLs are the allowable concentration of herbicides on food crops. Health Canada and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) come up with MRLs by feeding rats or dogs herbicide until an effect is observed. The figures are important for trade: If countries have different MRLs, shipments can be rejected. In 2011, the European Union rejected a shipment of Canadian lentils because MRLs were 40 times the EU limit. Alternatively, countries can use MRLs to negotiate a lower price, or raise their MRLs in response to industry pressure.

According to the EPA, between 1993 and 2015, glyphosate MRLs increased by 100 percent to 1,000 percent in the U.S., depending on the crop. Desiccation has changed the game: Because we are using more herbicides, herbicide residues and MRLs have also gone up.  Countries can use MRLs as a bartering tool to negotiate lower prices, and will raise their MRLs in response to pressure. Monsanto and other manufacturers of glyphosate have requested increases in MRLs, and been granted many of them.2

Current MRLs for glyphosate range from 0.2 ppm to more than 300 ppm, depending on the crop. Between 1993 and 2015, the U.S. EPA glyphosate tolerance levels have increased by a factor of 50 for corn, and 2,000 for alfalfa.2

As MRLs rise, some industry groups are starting to avoid desiccated crops. Stuart Smyth, an agricultural economist at the University of Saskatchewan, tells me that certain oat millers are no longer accepting desiccated oats. “They say it’s because they don’t mill as well,” he says, “but there’s not a single study showing this.”

The millers might be worried about more than oat milling properties. General Mills, producer of Nature Valley granola bars, was recently sued by a group disputing their claim to be 100 percent natural. Because oats are commonly desiccated before harvest, the grains contain glyphosate residues. The case was dismissed in July this year, because the judge ruled that the glyphosate residues satisfied EPA standards.

At first, I doubt that I’ll be able to tell which of Shewchuk’s fields had been desiccated. But the shriveled, brown peas are in stark relief to the green fields around it. Even if the surrounding crops hadn’t been green, the sprayer tracks, squashing a path through the dead plants, are a dead giveaway.

As we drive along, the pale green, almost rubbery stems of canola are left denuded on the bare soil, while brown seedpods collect in neat windrows behind us.

Hart_BREAKER-2
The past: Mike Shewchuk in a field of canola that’s almost ready to swath. The hint of green in the foliage means that the field has not been desiccated. Shewchuk grows a variety of canola that cannot tolerate desiccation, but that might change as new varieties are developed.

 

After the canola, we stop by a field of wheat. It is mostly yellow, but there is still a tinge of green in places, and the occasional deep, green weed, which is the real clue that it hasn’t been desiccated. We enter the field, pushing aside the prickly, barbed awns. He slides some grains off a head and hulls them in his palm.

“We’ll probably spray it this week, could have sprayed earlier, ” Shewchuk decides, chewing on some berries.

Why spray—why spend the extra fuel and herbicide, if the crop is ready to go?

“Insurance. When we spray we can harvest within 10 days.”

Given that he has roughly one month to get the crops off the field before the frost, I’m starting to see that it might be impossible to do any other way. The farm is so big that its fields are never ready to cut at the same time. It’s not the big machines that allow Shewchuk to farm such a massive operation—it’s the herbicide.

“Farms these days are huge,” Chris Willenborg tells me. “A large farm is 30,000 acres.” Willenborg is a farmer as well as an academic, at the University of Saskatchewan. “In my ‘farmer’ hat, desiccation makes sense because it’s efficient,” he says. I can’t visualize the scope of a farm that big. It could have different soil types, different climates even. It could be hard, even impossible, to have good weather long enough to harvest it all.2

There are economic reasons, too, for desiccation. There hasn’t been a new herbicide in 25 years because they’re so expensive to develop. If herbicide sales have topped out, why not encourage pre-harvest spraying, and sell twice the product? In business circles, this is called increasing “use patterns.” Willenborg tells me that farmers are being pushed to desiccate by herbicide manufacturers. Reporters for industry standards like The Western Producer, a bible for Canadian farmers, frequently run editorials about proper desiccation protocols.

The question is: How much is too much?

“In my ‘researcher hat’, I’d say we already apply too much herbicide,” Willenborg says.  “Some weeds are good—you don’t want to get rid of all weeds. What would the seed predators eat?” Willenborg sees the cropping system as an ecosystem whose health relies on things like weeds and insects.

Then there is the question of gut health.

Desiccants kill more than plants. Herbicides like glyphosate also kill bacteria. You could just as easily call them “antibiotics.” Our gut bacteria are sensitive to antibiotics, which is why we should avoid eating herbicides. When our microbes are healthy, our immune system is stable. But when microbes are disturbed, diseases like obesity, Alzheimer’s, or celiac disease can result.

Long-term exposure to antibiotics results in lasting shifts in gut microbiota. Cattle are fed low dose antibiotics in feedlots—not to stave off disease, but because it makes them gain weight more easily than an antibiotic-free cow. It changes their gut microbes so that they grow fat on less food. A study from March this year showed that glyphosate exposure changed the composition of honeybee gut microbes, which could make the bees more susceptible to colony collapse.6

Herbicides are particularly dangerous for gut microbes because they’re poorly absorbed by the gut. Low absorption means that gut bacteria are subjected to prolonged contact with the herbicide as it passes through the digestive system. Ironically, poor absorption is part of the reason that herbicides are deemed safe enough to put on our food.

We can’t prove that that there is any health cost to the practice. But neither can we say there isn’t a cost.

“We don’t actually know what happens when gut microbes are exposed to herbicides,” Deanna Gibson tells me. She studies the interaction between diet, gut microbes, and disease at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan. Her lab is a hive of researchers from around the world homogenizing frozen poop samples and mice guts. “It’s shocking to me that the chemicals we feed to lab mice to disrupt gut function are actually common herbicides—like glyphosate,” Gibson says. “How are we not talking about this as a society?”

Part of the answer is that neither Health Canada nor the U.S. EPA consider herbicides as antibiotics. This means that their safety assessments do not consider effects on human gut microbes. There have been no explicit tests of the effect of desiccation on our microbiome. The only studies that exist consider rats, cattle, bees, and turtles—because it is unethical to test the effects of toxins on humans.

Plus, there is other stuff in herbicides that is dangerous for both animals and microbes.  Commercial herbicides are cocktails of chemicals that include herbicidal agents and chemicals that improve their delivery. These “adjuvants” include petroleum byproducts, neurotoxins, and endocrine disruptors. Adjuvants help the herbicidal penetrate the thick, waxy layer that surrounds plant cells, making them good for breaching bacterial cell walls, too. But adjuvants are not subjected to the same regulation as herbicides, and are considered “inert” without much evidence. Desiccation means adjuvants are being applied to edible crops in large quantities (as opposed to weeds, their original target).  Their toxicity has not been studied.

So what can we do?  To begin, we need to clearly determine how much glyphosate the human population is exposed to. My lab has started to do this—but it’s not easy. How much glyphosate are we exposed to? We can estimate residues in foods, but what about in the water table? Indirect exposure through agricultural and forestry use? Then we need to begin the difficult task of evaluating that risk, through animal models, and correlational studies in humans. This will not be easy, or fast.

Desiccation makes it possible to cultivate massive tracts of farmland and feed billions of people profitably. Based on the evidence we have so far, we can’t prove that that there is any health cost to the practice. But neither can we say there isn’t a cost—and there are many reasons to think there might be one.

On my way home from Shewchuk’s farm, I stopped by a desiccated pea field. It was a clear afternoon, but the air was heavy with dust, casting an orange glow on the field. Four combines, each as big as a small building, were kicking up dirt and chaff from the peas while two enormous semi-trailers waited to receive the seeds. At least a dozen hawks circled overhead, waiting for the rodents that were now exposed on the bare ground. I knew agriculture had changed, but I couldn’t have imagined this scene so divorced from the mom and pop farms of my childhood. The scene was from some dystopia. I was reminded of a famous quote by Alanis Obomsawin: “When the last tree is cut, the last fish is caught, and the last river is polluted … you will realize, too late, that wealth is not in bank accounts and that you can’t eat money.”

But what if we can’t eat our own food, either?

Miranda Hart is a microbial ecologist and professor at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan

References

1. Landrigan, P.J. & Belpoggi, F. The need for independent research on the health effects of glyphosate-based herbicides. Environmental Health 17, 51 (2018).

2. Benbrook, C.M. Trends in glyphosate herbicide use in the United States and globally. Environmental Sciences Europe 28, 3 (2016).

3. Canadian Food Inspection Agency. Safeguarding with Science: Glyphosate Testing in 2015-2016.

4.  CBC News Staff. Nearly a third of food samples in CFIA testing contain glyphosate residues. www.cbc.ca (2017).

5. Copley, C. German beer purity in question after environment group finds weed-killer traces. Reuters (2016).

6. Motta, E.V.S., Raymann, K., & Moran, N.A. Glyphosate perturbs the gut microbiota of honey bees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115, 10305-10310 (2018).

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
22 Comments
1 of the 6%
1 of the 6%
November 27, 2018 10:26 am

Easy solution: don’t consume seed oils; do consume organic foods; only consume pasture-raised animals.

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
November 27, 2018 10:32 am

The seeds of revolution germinate in an empty belly. We (and the people who rule us) want the most, cheapest food we can get right now. I have no idea if the cost/benefit and relative risk calculations on increased herbicide use are accurate or not. I am sure that we will demand more and more crop production until the answer is clear, one way or another.

Feast or famine? Now or later? You pays your money, you takes your choice. Not really. The choice has already been made for you. Keep sending the money, though. We’ll let you know how it works out.

TampaRed
TampaRed
November 27, 2018 10:52 am

perfect timing,i just read this a couple of hours ago–there is a polio like infection spreading among mostly kids w/the occasional adult also affected–
the article also delves into glysophate(roundup) and it’s adjuvants–arsenic is a big component of them–

Why Are Public Health Officials Playing Dumb

meg
meg
  TampaRed
November 27, 2018 7:17 pm

Thanks for the link. I missed this one of LRC.

Exring
Exring
November 27, 2018 11:03 am

Through the use of glyphosates and GMO seeds, are we poisoning our population? More important still, how may this be related to the dramatically increasing rate of Autism? Or, the rate of immune issues like, peanut alergies which were near Non-existant before the 90’s? I am very familiar with the fragile state of the Developing embryo and how much effect may this system be having on that set of “tote-potential” cells in utero, before the mother even knows she is pregnant? We should be looking! We should be afraid!

wdg
wdg
November 27, 2018 11:04 am

We live in a strange world where the food supply and the soil that sustains agriculture has been poisoned, much of our water supply contaminated, and the medical system has become a pusher of harmful drugs for Big Pharma…and yet trillions of dollars are wasted trying to reduce a clean and essential gas, carbon dioxide, that drives photosynthesis (Studies at CSIRO show that plant productivity increased up to 15% over the past century due to CO2.) and has nothing whatsoever to do with global warming which has not happened in any case since about 1998. In fact, solar cycles indicate that we are probably heading into a mini ice age that could last for decades and have severe negative consequences for food production. Yet, almost every day we are bombarded with yet another junk science report about how an increase in CO2 is going to literally destroy the planet. For example, the UN’s IPCC Report released recently has given us 12 years before we face an environmental Armageddon due to increasing CO2, all duly hyped by the Fake News Networks, and without any consideration that previous IPCC forecasts produced by unconstrained and poorly understood climate models have been totally wrong. Such is the mad world of endemic lies that we now live in.

Martel's Hammer
Martel's Hammer
November 27, 2018 11:04 am

“I can say Saskatchewan without starting to stutter”….. The Proclaimers. On our hay fields we don’t use Roundup or other herbicides we have found some organic non-toxic “natural” weed killers..don’t work as well but we are hobbyists so it’s better to be safe.

unit472
unit472
November 27, 2018 11:06 am

Very interesting. There are very powerful interests on both sides of this controversy and I suspect it infects the debate as much as the science. France is cracking down hard on pesticides and may do the same with herbicides but , as noted, it could be lower MRL’s are just a means to keep imports out not out of any demonstrable health effects.

Of course high food prices have a health effect too and starvation isn’t quite the same as 25% greater chance of developing a cancer over a lifetime. It has immediate and often deadly impacts on life.

As to gut bacteria maybe fecal transplants will become the most common transplant of the future.

Oldtimer505
Oldtimer505
November 27, 2018 11:29 am

This practice has been going on for a very long time. I am surprised it is just now becoming common knowledge. This was and is one of the largest threats mankind has to deal with not to mention GMO modified foods and now animals. Folks, grow your own! If you can’t do that then do organic but, realize there are a lot of guidelines to the term organic. Source where the food comes from if you can. The only sure method is, grow as much as you can of your own!

BSHJ
BSHJ
November 27, 2018 12:06 pm

So they use science to determine a MRL but then use economics to arbitrarily raise or lower the number. Hey, it works for the US debt ‘ceiling’.

TC
TC
November 27, 2018 12:12 pm

This is a worthwhile presentation if you want to learn more about glyphosate and the gut biome.

meg
meg
  TC
November 28, 2018 6:31 am

This was a really good video. Thanks

Kunga
Kunga
November 27, 2018 2:23 pm

Population reduction. Even better if can profit from the chronic diseases caused in the patient before they croak. Fluoride, chemtrails, pesticides, plastics,wildfires, overuse of medical chemicals, etc. etc….
Glad gut issue with glyphosate addressed. Gut is a second brain. Just keep dumbing them down, boyz.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
November 27, 2018 6:17 pm

The earth will repair itself. The first step will be having a lot less humans on it.

NtroP
NtroP
November 27, 2018 7:15 pm

Monsanto-Bayer have merged.
They are evil fuckers, for sure.

meg
meg
  NtroP
November 28, 2018 6:45 am

Didn’t those Bayer folks make some special gas for Hitler?

unit472
unit472
  meg
November 28, 2018 8:41 am

No I.G. Farben according to legend developed Zyklon B which was a pesticide.

mygirl
mygirl
November 27, 2018 9:39 pm

A topic near and dear to my heart since I suffer from two auto-immune diseases. The poisoning of our food will have, and is already having, a day of reckoning and dire consequences with illnesses ranging from autism to IBD and cancer. More drugs, hideously expensive drugs with wicked bad side effects to ‘treat’ the diseases of the 20th century and never a mention made about the over-use of pesticides and herbicides in modern factory farming. It becomes harder and harder to find unadulterated food and the fallacy of ‘grow your own’ never takes into account just what-all is required to grow and raise unadulterated food.

meg
meg
  mygirl
November 28, 2018 6:40 am

The best thing about the farmland my husband and I bought in the suburbs of the sticks is that the land had sat unfarmed for 25 years, since the realtor had purchased the ground in a tax sale or whatever they call it.

And you are correct about the difficulty of growing your own. It is tempting to take the shortcuts.(pesticides, fertilizers, herbicides) But, we just are not gonna do it

TampaRed
TampaRed
November 27, 2018 10:44 pm

since we’re piling on here w/the bad stuff,here’s a little more–
i subscribe to consumer reports and last month(october) they had a detailed article about some of the very powerful drugs & the heavy concentrations of those drugs that are in our beef,chicken and pork–
cr charges for online access & i don’t pay for it so i can’t post it but if any of you do,maybe you could post it —

unit472
unit472
November 28, 2018 8:59 am

Japanese have the longest lifespans of any people but they aren’t that much longer than anyone else and if ‘diet’ is the reason is would have more to do with what elderly Japanese were eating 50 or 60 years ago which was mostly fish, rice and vegetable. They also smoked alot or at least the men did who were also known for tying on some pretty serious drinking binges.

Of course sitting in a wheelchair with senile dementia counts as lifespan too so getting a few extra years in that situation is not a real bargain.

John Mauldin writes of ‘useful lifespan’ , i.e. the number of years of good health and we don’t seem to be making much progress here. 75 or 80years for women is all we can reasonably expect no matter what we do. Our immune systems start to weaken and our parts start wearing out after than so even our longest lived centenarians are in pretty bad shape when they hit that 100 mark.

steve
steve
November 28, 2018 10:31 am

Glyphosate has a half life of somewhere around 100 days. Therefore the levels in the soil just keep increasing. Soil bacteria are undoubtedly being wiped out. Great…. dead soil producing dead food that kills our intestinal bacteria. What could go wrong ???