Every year, much of North America and the
world is drenched in the weedkiller glyphosate
(the key ingredient in Roundup). Is this safe?
Or are we living in a giant test tube?
Since 1974, in the U.S., 1.8 million tons have
been sprayed on crops, forests, road sides,
waterways, golf courses, lawns and school
grounds. Worldwide, 9.4 million tons have been
applied.[1]
In British Columbia, hundreds of thousands of
hectares of forests have been sprayed, with
research showing that the residue can linger in
some forest plants for up to 12 years.[2]
Since the 1990s, when glyphosate was paired
with crops that have been genetically modified
to be resistant to it, such as GMO corn and
soybeans, its use has increased 15-fold. As a
result, glyphosate residue has been detected in
85 per cent of the 10,000 foods tested in the
U.S., including corn, honey, breakfast cereal,
baby food, crackers, cookies, mushrooms, grapes
and green beans.[3]
The chemical was first developed as a mineral
chelator to clean boilers and pipes, but in 1974
the Monsanto corporation began to promote it as
a broad-spectrum herbicide that effectively
killed vegetation designated as weeds, yet was
supposedly harmless to other forms of life
including humans and animals.[4]
Glyphosate works by blocking the action of an
important enzyme at the cellular level in what
is called the "shikimate" pathway which is only
present in plants.[5][6] This enzyme
is responsible for synthesizing three amino
acids which are essential to building proteins.
Without this enzyme, the plant starves to death.
However, vertebrates like humans do not have the
shikimate pathway and, as a result, the argument
is made by Monsanto that, according to
"independent" research, glyphosate does not have
a negative impact on human or animal health (note:
some of this supposed research has recently
proven to have been "ghost written" by
Monsanto itself).[7]
In any case, Monsanto's conclusion is disputed
by a number of other researchers in the
scientific, medical and environmental
communities. One of the important reasons they
give is that Monsanto is leaving out a crucial
component. And that is the estimated 100
trillion microbes in the human and animal
microbiome, which includes the gut and other
parts of the body. Unlike humans and animals,
most of these microbes do have a shikimate
pathway and thus, as recent research has shown,
may be vulnerable to glyphosate.[8]
These microbes -- bacteria, fungi, viruses and
archaea -- play a key role in the digestion of
food in human and animal guts, as well as
regulation of the immune system, and other vital
functions. Without these trillions of microbes
inside us, many of which have a symbiotic
relationship with our bodies, we would sicken
and die. Our knowledge is still limited about
the complex interaction between microbes and our
bodies. But we do know that dysfunction of the
gut microbiome is associated with a wide range
of diseases, including some cancers,
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, Crohn's
disease, allergies, inflammatory bowel disease
and other disorders.[9]
At the present time, over 96,000 legal cases
are pending in the U.S. launched by people who
were exposed to glyphosate and have contracted
cancers like non-Hodgkins lymphoma and multiple
myeloma, as well as other illnesses.[10]
Recent research has also shown that glyphosate
can have a "perturbing effect" on microbes that
live inside insect guts, including bees,[11] mosquitoes[12] and
beetles,[13]
as well as on the microbes and fungi that are
crucial to the health of the soil itself. The
impact on honey bees is particularly troubling
in that glyphosate can significantly reduce "the
abundance of beneficial bacterial species that
contribute to immune regulation and pathogen
resistance.[14]
For their part, bees provide an economically
critical role in pollinating crops, as well as
supplying honey and other products.
Herb Martin of Stop the Spray BC,[15] which is
based in the Central Interior of British
Columbia, believes that glyphosate spraying
could also be affecting the digestive systems of
moose with anecdotal reports of moose starving
to death yet their bellies remaining full of
undigested twigs. So far, there have not been
scientific studies on this topic. For Martin
that is a big part of the problem in that
glyphosate is being extensively sprayed on our
lands and waters, yet, despite valiant efforts
by a few scientists, much has not been
researched on its human, animal and
environmental effects. He points out that
Monsanto claimed for decades that glyphosate
would not persist in the environment beyond 30
days after application. That claim has since
been proven to be absolutely wrong, yet
glyphosate continues to be widely used with
humans, animals and insects reduced to virtual
test subjects.
The glyphosate problem underlines the problem
of out-of-control productive forces in North
America and the world. Developments in science
and technology can be and are a great boon and
benefit to humanity. But if they are skewed by
narrow interests and private profit at the
expense of the public interest, difficulties and
even disasters arise. For example, a chemical
like glyphosate is not necessarily a bad thing
in itself. In that regard, it is like any
powerful or toxic chemical that is discovered.
Such chemicals have to be assessed as to whether
they can play a positive or negative role in
terms of human health and the environment,
rather than as a calculation on the balance
sheet of multinational corporations like
Monsanto that utilize suspect research to
promote their products.
Currently, the herbicide is out of control in
many parts of the world. It needs to be brought
under control and that includes banning it
completely (such as immediately eliminating all
spraying on forest lands) or phasing out its
applications on crops and other venues, and
adopting safer methods of eliminating weeds. It
also means that more thorough, independent and
authoritative research is needed before such
chemicals are unleashed on nature and the
public.
Notes
1. "Glyphosate
fact sheet: Cancer and other health concerns."
USRTK. October 1, 2020.
2. N. Botten, L.J.
Wood, and J.R. Werner. "Glyphosate remains in
forest plant tissues for a decade or more." Forest
Ecology and Management, April 26, 2021.
3, "Glyphosate fact sheet." USRTK.
4. Don Huber.
"Disrupting the integrity of Nature --
Pesticides and genetic engineering." Pesticides
and you. Volume 37, Number 2, Summer
2017.
5. University of Turku.
"Glyphosate may affect human gut microbiota."
Science Daily. November 20, 2020.
6. Pesticide Action
Network Europe. "Alternative methods in weed
management to the use of glyphosate and other
herbicides." 2017.
7. Carey Gillam. Whitewash:
The story of a weed killer, cancer, and the
corruption of science. Island Press.
Washington. 2017.
8. University of Turku.
"Glyphosate may affect human gut microbiota."
9. "Daily News Blog."
Beyond Pesticides. April 30, 2021.
10. "Glyphosate fact
sheet." USRTK.
11. Motta and Morana.
"Impact of glyphosate on the honey bee gut
microbiota." NIH. National Library of
Medicine. 2020.
12. "Ingredient in
common weed killer impairs insect immune
systems, study suggest." John Hopkins
University Bloomberg School of Public Health.
May 13, 2021.
13. Philip Kieffer.
"The main ingredient in RoundUp doesn't just
kill plants. It harms beetles, too," Popular
Science, May 13, 2021.
14. Erick V.S. Motta
and Nancy Morana. "Impact of glyphosate "
15. Stop the
Spray BC.
This article was published in
Volume 51 Number 7 - July 4, 2021
Article Link:
https://cpcml.ca/Tmlm2021/Articles/M5100710.HTM
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca