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Where Are We and How Did We Get Here?

Where Are We and How Did We Get Here?. Wh. W. Wh. “Farming is such a senseless pursuit, a mere laboring in a circle. You sow that you may reap, and then you reap that you may sow…nothing ever comes of it”. STOBAEUS, Florilegium. Pt. xxxviii, 1. 30 fl Fifth Century.

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Where Are We and How Did We Get Here?

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  1. Where Are We and How Did We Get Here? Wh W Wh

  2. “Farming is such a senseless pursuit, a mere laboring in a circle. You sow that you may reap, and then you reap that you may sow…nothing ever comes of it” STOBAEUS, Florilegium. Pt. xxxviii, 1. 30 fl Fifth Century

  3. “the almond tree shall flourish and the grasshopper will be a burden” Ecclesiastes 12:5 (King James Version)

  4. 7000 B.C.E.- Jericho – cultivated grain related to wheat, domesticated goats, & gazelles 7000

  5. 7000 B.C.E. North Thailand – domesticated beans, peas, gourds, & water chestnuts

  6. 7000 B.C.E. Mexico – domesticated pumpkins & gourds

  7. 7000 B.C.E. Near East – practiced irrigation, planted nitrogen fixing crops, built silos& granaries

  8. Insects and History Information about insect-borne diseases of early humans is hard to find: -deadly fevers –probably malaria-have been recorded since the beginning of the written word (6000-5500 B.C.E.) -references can be found in the Vedic writings of 1600 B.C.E. in India & by Hippocrates some 2500 years ago

  9. -vague biblical references to outbreaks of pestilence resembling bubonic plague -scourges of flies, lice, & other insects are referred to in various parts of the Bible

  10. Insects and History Sinhue was a physician to one of the early pharaohs in about 2000 B.C.E. and accompanied the Egyptian army in its battles with the Hittities in Syria and wrote vividly about the plague in Syria

  11. Insects and History There are some indications that insects played a role in human diseases and human misery but few authentic data concerning the depredations of insects on Homo sapiens were recorded before 500 B.C.E.

  12. Insects and History The glories of earlier well-advanced civilizations were beginning to fade about that time. • Wars, famine, and pestilences followed each other rapidly across the face of the known world. • Wandering hordes of soldiers roamed the land.

  13. Insects and History • Caravans of Cathay and the hosts of Hannibal spread disease and destruction among the inhabitants of the earth • This was the setting for the Dark Ages which were to follow

  14. Insects and History The human species had by that time established conditions which we know lead to disaster. • It had ignored or forgotten sanitary practices well known to the ancients • Unrestricted international travel had become common

  15. Insects and History • Economic and social conditions had driven famine- and pestilence-stricken people into already overpopulated cities • Methods for the disposal of human wastes were bestial • Quarantine measures against disease were unknown

  16. Insects and History • World wars and unparalleled lust for power and conquest by various kingdoms ravaged the known world • Insects, on the alert to take advantage of human’s every mistake, pounced with unmitigated fury upon their human enemy during this period • They spread diseases which destroyed as much as 25% of a population

  17. Insects & History • Insects altered the course of history and the destiny of nations • Hannibal was stymied in Syracuse by the inroads of malaria among his troops • Plague visited the colony on Greenland & wiped it out 150 years before before Columbus discovered America • In Europe in some areas 3 out of every 4 people died from this disease transmitted by the rat flea

  18. Insects and History • One of the first military expenditures of the Continental Congress, around 1775, was $300 to buy quinine to protect General Washington’s troops • Napoleon was stopped on the threshold of his conquest of Russia by the cold, typhus fever, & body lice which accompanied it • His military might in Haiti, 25,000 men, was reduced to impotence within 2 years when Yellow Fever killed 22,000 of the command

  19. Napoleon became so disgusted with the “New World” that he sold the French territory on North American Continent to the United States for $15 million dollars, or less than 3 cents an acre

  20. Insects and History • De Lesseps could not overcome the losses of his laborers caused by Yellow Fever & Malaria & abandoned efforts to build the Panama Canal • Many insect-borne plagues swept across Europe & other parts of the world from the time of Justinian to about the middle of the 19th century

  21. Insects and History • Yellow Fever invaded the Atlantic, Gulf Coast, & other parts of the country with amazing ferocity, 95 times between 1693 & 1901 • At least 500,000 casualties – 100,000 dead • 41,000 in New Orleans • 10,000 in Philadelphia • 8,000 in Memphis • 5,000 in Charleston

  22. Insects and History • During the Civil War, Yellow Fever, typhoid, malaria, & dysentery struck heavier blows than either Army could wield with its fighting equipment • One-half of the white & 80% of the black soldiers of the Union Army got malaria annually • The Spanish-American War had hardly started before American troops again were victimized by insect-borne diseases

  23. Insects and History • The conflict only lasted a few months, but yellow fever hospitalized some 1500 soldiers & killed several hundred others • And gave us Teddy Roosevelt and the Rough Riders

  24. Plant Disease and History • 1845 the Potato Famine occurred in Ireland, caused by the late blight fungus, Phytophora infestans, which resulted in the lost of at least a million lives and at least one million immigrants to the US • In 1692, ergot intoxication may well have caused the Salem Witch Trials and other Witch Trials

  25. Pesticides • When did humans begin to fight back against insect and fungal enemies of their health, comfort, and bed & board – we can only guess • Animals learn quickly that standing in smoke of a fire repels the attack of mosquitoes, after the discovery of fire, early humans probably used smudges to repel biting insects

  26. Pesticides • The first record of pesticide use is in about 1200 B.C.E. when it is recorded that Biblical Armies sowed the fields of a conquered people with salt and ashes • In 1000 B.C.E. Homer refers to the burning of “brimstone” as a fumigant and some other means of pest control

  27. Pesticides • The Greek philosopher, Pliny the Elder, in the 1st century, wrote Natural History in which he recorded all of the methods of pest control used up to that time(including gall from the green lizard to protect apples from worms and rot) • The Chinese were using arsenic to control garden insects in 900. • Marco Polo wrote in 1300 of using mineral oil against mange of camels

  28. Pesticides • In 1526 -31 the monks of Troyes formally excommunicated the caterpillars that were plaguing the crops, but added that the interdict would be effective only for lands whose peasants had paid their church tithes. • Durant, W. 1957. The History of Civilization: Part IV. The Reformation. New York. Simon & Schuster. P. 850

  29. Food Regulations • King John of England signed the Magna Carta in 1215. • First Parliament elected in 1265 • In the interim, Guilds made the rules necessary for a civilized society • In 1236, a Guild passed a rule that forbade the addition of anything to the food supply which was “not wholesome”

  30. Pesticide and Food Regs • Other dates which are significant in the history of pesticide development & regulations and food regulations • 1649 – Rotenone used to paralyze fish in South America • 1690 – Tobacco extracts were used as contact insecticides • 1800 – Persian louse powder (pyrethrum) known to the Caucasus

  31. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1813 – Millardet discovered the value of hydrated lime and copper sulfate (Bordeaux mixture) to control downy mildew on grapes • 1896 – Copper sulfate used to selectively control weeds in field grains • 1905 – Upton Sinclair’s novel, TheJungle, was published

  32. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1906 – Passage of the Pure Food Law (Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act)- food shipped in interstate commerce must be wholesome • 1910 – Passage of the Federal Insecticide Act - mainly to protect farmers from substandard or fraudulent products

  33. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1921 – Airplane first used for spreading insecticide dust for the control of the catalpa sphinx at Troy, Ohio • 1922 – First aerial application of an insecticide to cotton, Tallulah, LA

  34. Pesticides • 1924 – Airplane first used in control of disease-bearing insects. Paris green dust applied to swamps in Louisiana for control of malaria-bearing Anopheles mosquitoes

  35. Pesticides and Food Regs • 1938 – Amendments to the FFDCA provided for coverage of pesticides on food, primarily the arsenicals such as lead arsenate and Paris Green.They requiredcolor be added to the formulations to prevent misuse and set tolerances for pesticide residues, viz. arsenic and lead, in foods where these materials were necessary for the production of a food supply

  36. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1939 – DDT discovered to have insecticidal qualities by Paul Muller in Switzerland (It had been first synthesized in 1873 by a German graduate student) • 1947 – The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) becomes law, since that time all pesticides, not just insecticides have been subject to Federal regulation & required all pesticides to be registered with the USDA

  37. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1954 – Passage of the Miller Amendment to the FFDCA, which set tolerances for all pesticides on raw food and feed products • 1958 – Passage of the Delaney Amendment to the FFDCA, provided that a chemical shown to cause cancer in animals or man cannot be added to the food supply

  38. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1959 – FIFRA (1946) was amended to include alleconomicpoisons, i.e.,desiccants and nematicides • 1962 – Publication of SilentSpring by Rachel Carson • 1970 – Formation of the Environmental Protection Agency, which becomes responsible for the registration of pesticides

  39. Pesticide and Food Regs • 1972 – Passage of the Federal Environmental Pesticide Control Act (FEPCA or FIFRA amended), in essence, these amendments changed the emphasis of FIFRA from product performance to human and environmental safety • 1996 – Passage of the Food Quality Protection Act which amended both FIFRA and FFDCA

  40. FIFRA • Section 3 Registration of Pesticides • (d) Classification of Pesticides • (1)(B) … if the pesticide, when applied in accordance with its directions for use, warnings and cautions and for the uses for which it is registered, or for one or more of such uses, or in accordance with a widespread and commonly recognized practice, will not generally cause unreasonably adverse effects on the environment,… classify the pesticide, or the particular use or uses of the pesticide to which the determination applies, for general use

  41. FIFRA (1)(C) … may generally cause, without additional regulatory restrictions, unreasonable adverse effects on the environment, including injury to the applicator,… shall classify the pesticide, or the particular use or uses to which the determination applies, for restricted use (ii) … the pesticide shall be applied… only by or under the direct supervision of a certified applicator

  42. FIFRA • Section 4. use of RUPs; Certified Applicators • (a)(2)(A) State Certification . The Administrator shall approve a plan submitted by any State provided it…designates a State agency as the agency responsible for administering the plan throughout the State

  43. FIFRA • Section 12. Unlawful Acts • (a)(2)(G) to use any registered pesticide in a manner inconsistent with its labeling

  44. FIFRA • Section 23. State Cooperation, Aid, and Training • (a) Cooperative Agreements-The Administrator may enter into cooperative agreements with States and Indian Tribes- • (1) … to any State or Indian Tribe the authority to cooperate in the enforcement of the Act… • (c) Information and Training- The Administrator shall, in cooperation with the Secretary of Agriculture, use the services of the cooperative State extension services to inform and educate pesticide users about accepted uses and other regulations made under this Act

  45. FIFRA • Section 26. State Primary Enforcement Responsibility • (a) For the purposes of the Act, a State shall have primary enforcement responsibility for pesticide use violations during any period for which the Administrator determines that such State – • (1) has adopted adequate pesticide use laws and regulations; Provided, That the Administrator may not require a State to have pesticide use laws that are more stringent than this Act

  46. FIFRA • (2) has adopted and is implementing adequate procedures for the enforcement of such State laws and regulations; and • (3) will keep such records and make such reports showing compliance with paragraphs (1) and (2) of the subsection

  47. Food Quality Protection Act (FPQA) • Amended both FIFRA and FFDCA • Got rid of the Delaney Clause as far as pesticide residues are concerned • Established a standard of a “reasonable certainty of no harm due aggregate exposure” • All exposure except occupational • If this standard (Risk Cup) is exceeded some uses must be cancelled

  48. Some Thoughts • Victor Hugo is supposed to have said the “nothing is so strong as an idea whose time has come, armies cannot prevail against it” • Note that the two most significant pieces of legislation related to pesticides and food safety have passed after the publication of books, viz.,TheJungle and SilentSpring.

  49. Some Thoughts • Regulations are not a product of 19th or 20th century American government – reread The Torah or the first five books of the Christian Bible. The life of the early Hebrews was almost totally circumscribed by, in some instances, very severe regulations

  50. “It is morally wrong to perpetuate ignorance and through ignorance … fear” Charlotte Sine Executive Vice President Meister Publishing Company

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