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The fight to protect pollinators and people from the ‘pesticides that are everywhere’
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of Grist


Grist, June 1, 2026
Posted: July 2nd, 2026
https://grist.org/sponsored/the-fight-to-protect-pollinators...

Cory Kreft began working on a honey farm at 15 years old ... eventually buying the business from his former boss. But in 2021, his bees suddenly began dying. He lost 85 percent of his hives. The losses continued the next year, and the next. After extensive testing, he identified the culprit: a relatively new class of pesticides called neonicotinoids, often shortened to neonics. Thanks in part to a federal regulatory loophole, the use of neonic-treated seed has quietly exploded in recent years, with little regulation or oversight. Almost all conventional corn and more than half of soy seed in the U.S. is now treated with neonics. When bees encounter neonic-contaminated pollen, the neurotoxin disrupts the neurological functions they rely on to navigate, forage, and survive. The hive then slowly declines and dies. “Over the last five years, we’ve seen between 60 to 85 percent hive mortality each year,” said Kreft. “It’s about a million dollars in losses for us annually.” While the harm neonics inflict on pollinators is well documented, their effects on humans remain less certain. A recent study found that over 95 percent of pregnant women had neonics in their bodies. The chemicals have been linked to neurological, reproductive system, and developmental harms. Because neonics are now so widespread in food and water ... exposure has become nearly constant. “It’s everywhere now,” [researcher Jennifer Sass] said. “It’s in breast milk, tap water, even in baby food.”

Note: For more along these lines, read our concise summaries of news articles on toxic chemicals and mass animal deaths.


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