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Will Somebody Douse Me In Chemicals Already?

by: Brian Leubitz

Fri May 02, 2008 at 16:25:20 PM PDT


Light Brown Apple MothOk, so last week, I thought all this hubub about the Light Brown Apple Moth was much ado about nothing. I hadn't even seen one, and they didn't seem to be bugging me.  So, I didn't get what Arnold's big rush to spray pheremones or what not on to the Bay Area.

Things have changed. Last week a friend of ours was over at our house. It was a fine afternoon, the weather was nice, so we spent the time chatting outside.  We get to the conversation of this little moth. Turns out that our friend, a big shot lawyer at a video game company to remain nameless, is the patient zero of the Light Brown Apple Moth scourge upon her city.  She claimed they were all over her apartment, and sure enough, we went down there, and there they were. Sneaking around her place. I put the pieces together, she travels all over the world for work, and she has tons of them in her house.  How much more evidence do we need? Well, how much more was answered the next day when we saw some of the little buggers around our house.  Now the things are all over our house.  Apparently the've really taken to the Bay Area, and I'm pretty sure she's the vector.

Now, they don't seem to be really bothering me at this point here in SF, they're just annoying. But, I say, get some helicopters or bush planes, or whatever it takes, in the air, and let's get to dumping all sorts of chemicals on my fair city. What's a little caplet of inhaled pseudo-moth pheremones compared to some bugs in my house? What could possibly go wrong when we drop a chemical on to heavily populated urban areas? Really, I can't think of anything. Sure, some judge said the state can't spray, but whatever, let's do it anyway. 

Ok, I kid, but follow me over the flip..

Brian Leubitz :: Will Somebody Douse Me In Chemicals Already?
The LBAM is an interesting parable of our increasingly globalized society. Bugs from other parts of the world are here. Some are annoying, and some are real problems. The problem with the LBAM isn't necessarily what it does or doesn't eat at this point, the damage totals are mere guesses.  But from most reports that I've read, it seems that the LBAM is a bad thing, but it is no MedFly. But what's more disturbing is the failure of the state and federal governments to have early warning systems and clear protocols that allow for public comment and discussion.

The LBAM was found by a retired UC-Berkeley entimoligist in his backyard, but nobody was actively looking. Nobody.  The next great super-pest could be reaching our shores today, and we likely wouldn't know for years. With the food supply getting tighter and tighter as the world's population grows, we need to learn how to better manage non-native pests. We need to be vigilant from a planning perspective at the front.  Because an ounce of prevention is worth a few tons of cure here:

The light brown apple moth, the ravenous crop-eating Australian pest detected in at least 11 California counties since mid-March, “was probably here a very long time prior to its discovery and it’s probably far more widespread than currently delineated.”

***

“However, once a pest has a major foothold, it’s very difficult to eradicate it,” said [UC-Davis entomologist James R. Carey]. “While state and federal agricultural officials often talk about eradicating a ‘population,’ in reality, this requires eradication of thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of mini-populations/pockets. Thus, anything short of 100 percent elimination of these thousands of pockets is control, not eradication.”

From the perspective of a city-dweller, we need to be prepared to explain, and back up with hard evidence, any proposed or actual treatments for the pests. It's not that urban residents are distincty opposed to measures against these species, it's that, in the case of the LBAM, nobody bothered to explain to us what was about to be dumped on to our cities.  That's why the residents (and elected leaders) of the County of Santa Cruz and other localities fought the spray so hard. It's not that the name sounded a bit scary (which it did...Checkmate, yikes!), it's that there were no conclusive studies showing the safety and efficacy of these synthetic pheremones.  It's that nobody bothered to mention until a few days that we would soon be inhaling Checkmate into our systems. Heck, in SD-03, all three candidates, Leno, Migden, and Nation, are talking about this little moth more than you could possibly imagine.

Thus there are competing forces here, because eradication requires speed, and due process requires a deliberate, uh, process. Of course, we can gain extra time through better advance detection, but we also need to improve our preparation for future pests. So, better research, but also a streamlined system that will allow public debate over whether the ends justify the means for each insect. 

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I believe you might be mistaken (0.00 / 0)
Epiphyas postvittana is a notoriously difficult moth to visually identify and DNA testing is required. The unnamed attorney in this piece is expected to capture a speciment and bring it to the County Agricultural Commissioner's Office.

The reason this is critical is that, say for instance her apartment was actually overrun with Pandemis albaniana. Having an accurate identification of such a month having made it to San Francisco from the central coast would be big news and would likely require the dousing of the city in chemicals.

Twitter: @BobBrigham


You know (8.00 / 1)
I'd never have figured you to be a lepidopterist...

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

[ Parent ]
Hey, Robert.... (5.00 / 1)
Take it easy with the language, this is a family blog!

[ Parent ]
She called em (0.00 / 0)

Thrice. And no response

I am no moth expert, but the resemblance is uncanny.  This ain"t your ordinary moth.



[ Parent ]
This is a HUGE issue here. (8.00 / 1)
We on the Monterey Peninsula had the wonderful pleasure (hah) of being the guinea pigs for the LBAM spraying. Last year we got sprayed twice - that damn plane flew low and loud, giving me some fitful sleep - but happily we didn't come down with any of the respiratory symptoms that were widely reported here after the spraying.

Since then the movement to stop the spraying has taken off, particularly in Santa Cruz, which appears to be the hardest hit county in the state (whereas here on the peninsula we had maybe one or two apple moth sightings). AD-27 candidate and former Santa Cruz mayor Emily Reilly took the lead up there in bringing the lawsuit, but there has been a strong grassroots network formed to mobilize the public in opposition.

Out of that movement some important things have emerged. The first is the underlying reason for the spray. There is not a lot of evidence to show that it is quite as destructive to crops as is feared. The real problem is that it makes global markets skittish. The US has placed bans or restrictions on imports from countries that have an apple moth "problem," such as New Zealand, and the ag industry is afraid the same will happen to California crops unless the apple moth is eradicated.

Of course, New Zealand has had a great deal of success containing and managing the moth, without resorting to spraying at all.

Which raises the other issue - why the insistence on spraying, before any research at all has been conducted on its effects on humans, before the normal approvals process has been conducted? The best answer I can come up with is that Arnold wants to expand executive power. The spraying is being pushed through as an emergency measure, bypassing environmental and public safety oversight processes. It strikes me as a test case for the ability to override these things in other emergencies as well.

It's good that the Bay Area is now dealing with this issue, because now it's not just the 50,000 of us who live on the Monterey Peninsula who are fighting the state. Having Leno and Migden on our side is very helpful, because the planes are scheduled to come our way again in June...

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


Top of the Food Chain (0.00 / 0)
a really apt short story by TC Boyle, covers the unintended consequences of pest control with his usual wit.  

Non native species of plants torment the people who watch out for our open spaces.  The answer is usually rip them up and plant more native species.  Dealing with creatures is always trickier.  I'd want to know, too- what tests have been done on the chemicals?  Do they act on the central nervous system of the insect?  Because we all have one of those.  Fair enough that you should ask, what is this substance, what does it do, and to what range of species?

When I was at California Wildlife Center, we got bobcats with secondary poisoning from the poisoned rats they had eaten.  It's a slow and awful death, unless the animal gets captured and treated in time.  We only had one who wasn't a goner, and that's because she was conveniently trapped early in her illness by the National Park Service for their tracking program, and they immediately noticed how weak, mangy, and miserable she was.  Hawks are affected by rat poison, too. Poison travels up the food chain.  The better answer to rat control is more rat predators (snakes and owls), and more steel wool in your knotholes around the house.  

I don't know what the answer is to the moths, but I hope the state has considered mechanical options, if there are any.  I use diatomaceous earth to keep ants out of my life, and it works just great.  No spraying needed.

I'm union staff, but not a spokesperson for my union - all posts represent my views solely.


One of the leading experts at UCB has stated for the record... (0.00 / 0)
...........that you cannot 'eradicate' this insect. It's here to stay. Further, to make a Rovian dividing line between city and country dwellers is one stupid thing to do.

Because of decades of kowtowing to Big Ag in the Central Valley the air there is now far more polluted than where I live in the Bay Area.

Does anyone really think the millions who live their are not aware of this and are not aware of the millions of dollars that change hands every year from Big Ag to the Legislature, both sides of the aisle, so that their children will continue to get sick and in more than a few cases die.

The Democratic Party has been trapped in the Obama 'creative class' delusion for far to long. It's past time to stop worrying about folks who drive Beemers to their corporate jobs and start caring about those too  economically or socially weak to defend themselves.

Imagine living in a country where you cannot prevent the government from spraying you and your children with poison.

Then realize that that is where you live.

Today.


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