The
reversal, issued on Aug. 2 in a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
memo, suggested that neonicotinoid pesticides, or neonics, were
needed for "farming practices” in refuge areas where that was
allowed.
Cultivation of biotech crops, engineered to resist pests and
withstand herbicides, has helped maximize crop production on
dozens of wildlife refuges.
A certain amount of agricultural activity has been permitted on
some refuges, where typically a share of the crops is harvested
by farmers for profit while another share is left as food or
habitat for animals.
Conservationists said in Wednesday’s notice of a pending lawsuit
that neonics and pesticides to which biotech crops are immune
are known to injure and kill imperiled creatures that rely on
refuges whose fundamental purpose is wildlife conservation.
“It’s shameful that the government is promoting agents that its
own scientists say harm threatened and endangered species,”
Hannah Connor, attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity,
told Reuters.
The notice by the Arizona-based group and the Center for Food
Safety to U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and the deputy
director of the Fish and Wildlife Service, an Interior agency,
said the lawsuit would be filed in federal court in 60 days
unless the new policy is rescinded.
A spokeswoman for Zinke referred inquiries to the U.S. Justice
Department, which did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
In 2014, amid lawsuits by environmentalists, the head of the
system that oversees the nation’s 560 refuge units ordered
phasing out of GM crops and the use of neonics since they could
harm “non-target” animals and plants and since they were not
needed for wildlife management goals that had been successfully
met in their absence.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Pinedale, Wyoming; Editing by
Bill Tarrant and James Dalgleish)
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