Environmental group seeks California ban on 'super-toxic' rat poisons
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[December 13, 2019]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - An environmental group launched
legal action on Thursday seeking to ban commercial use of "super-toxic"
rat poisons in California, citing data showing the products pose a grave
threat to a dozen endangered species and other wildlife.
The Center for Biological Diversity notified state pesticide regulators
of its intent to file suit for what the group calls a failure to
adequately safeguard the San Joaquin kit fox and 11 other animals
protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.
Harm to wildlife from highly toxic "rodenticides" is most pronounced for
predator and scavenger species, including mountain lions, bobcats, owls
and condors, which can feed on poisoned rodents, the group said.
More than 70% of wild animals tested in California in recent years
showed exposure to the rat poisons in question - so-called
second-generation anticoagulants widely used by licensed pest control
operators, the group's notice said.
The products are typically used in bait boxes and work by causing the
animal ingesting it to hemorrhage internally over a matter of days. The
slow-acting nature of the substances then poses a secondary threat to
other animals that prey on those that were poisoned.
California's Department of Pesticide Regulation outlawed consumer sales
of the chemicals in 2014, restricting their use to professional
exterminators and agricultural purposes. But the Biological Diversity
Center said exposure in the wild remained high.
Populations of endangered kit foxes near Bakersfield have been
especially hard hit, with 87% of those examined testing positive for the
super toxins, and state wildlife officials attributing at least five kit
fox deaths to the chemicals, the group said.
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San Joaquin kit foxes are seen in this undated handout photo
obtained by Reuters on December 12, 2019. USFWS/Handout via REUTERS
The group also cited a 2018 state analysis documenting those rat
poisons in over 85% of tested mountain lions, bobcats and Pacific
fishers, a federally protected member of the weasel family.
Other protected species at stake include the northern spotted owl,
the California condor, the Alameda whipsnake and four types of
kangaroo rats.
A pesticide department spokeswoman, Charlotte Fadipe, said the
agency was "actively looking into this issue."
"We also acknowledge it is essential to have tools available to
control rat populations in order to protect the public health," she
said.
The agency encourages "integrated pest management" combining the use
of traps, removal of refuse and water sources that attract rodents,
managing vegetation that can harbor vermin and sealing holes in
buildings that allow pests to enter.
Jonathan Evans, senior attorney for the environmental group, said
175 less toxic rat poisons also remained on the market that are far
safer to wildlife.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Culver City, Calif.; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and Peter Cooney)
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