jix
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2014
- Messages
- 611
- Location
- Fredericton, New Brunswick. CANADA
- Tractor
- 2015 Kioti CK2510HST/CAB?loader/bush hog,front blower
Help... the mosquitos are trying to steal my kobota... Should I get a bigger tractor?
Dave 1949..I dunno either Dave, but that is what says in a scientific citation from Google published by a blue berry boffin for the Blueberrie industryMosquitoes pollinate flowers!
Aedes communis: The Pollinating Mosquito
I'm still thinking about the 14 grains of pollen needed to pollinate blueberries. I think bees cannot count past three, so how do they get 14? :laughing: Couldn't multiple black flies visit the same blueberry blossom and eventually get to 14? I dunno about that bit of research.
Dave 1949..I dunno either Dave, but that is what says in a scientific citation from Google published by a blue berry boffin for the Blueberrie industry
NB is one of the largest producers of Canadian Blueberries and God knows we have a lotta mosquitos, but no snow lake mosquitos (not high enough in elevation in most parts). I think that the citation must be accurate, else why would blueberry farmers rent a lot of bee hives and bumble bee hives to put in their fields every summer?? I don't say that bluebewrries are never pollinated by blackflies, however, just that the blackfly is not a major pollinator Blue berries are a rhizome and do not need to be pollinated to spread their roots and start new clone plants, but must be pollinated by insects to produce good big sweet berries. Otherwise, they produce small berries with little juice which have very little commercial value and no seeds which will grow, since they are genetic clones of the bush that produces them if there is no cross pollination. Also, for this reason, cuitivated blueberry fields are located close to other blueberry fields from another rhizome ancestor, usually a large format blueberry field which produces very large blueberries. In my general area there are thousand acre blueberry fields, but you cannot get into them without breaking a fence.
My wife buys fresh berries in season and about 40 lbs of frozen berries for the winter. Frozen berries are about 15 bucks a ten pound box. we eat them on our cheerios every day. In Summer, I get the jumbo berries and eat them with heavy cream for a desert after dinner. Yummy!
What fun would living be without a bit mischief? :laughing:
I didn't think those articles were intended to be scary, just informative. What is more basic than knowing what you are eating? The interesting take away is you can avoid or limit your exposure through careful choices and actions. For blueberries, domestic versus imported, and conventional versus organic growing, makes a huge difference in typical pesticide residue levels.
Do you think the exposure to carcinogens, hormone disruptors, or neurotoxins for examples, is additive? A little here, a little there adds up I think. The health safety tests for various discrete chemical compounds don't address that additive result in the human body and certainly not over a long period of years, or differentiated for older less healthy immune systems. I ain't scared, but I think we know less than we think we do about some of this stuff.
2 4-D is not roundup.HI dave1949:
Yes and No. Why? Read on, if you dare:
I was once involved heavil, as an agent of the Federal Gov't, with an organization in Canada called Sprayers Of Dioxin. Their brief was to extort money from the Gov't for supposed damages from the use of Agent Orange in vast tracts of land, public and private for exposure to high leverls of Dioxin, which they claimed were caused by exposure to Dioxin along the railraods, power lines and military artillery ranges in new Brunswick. The chiref proponents were, you guessed it, Tort Lawyers aqnd members of the executive of the SODA protestors. It was an obscene arrangement which, had it been successful would have raked off 75% of all of the damages awarded. They were not successful for several reasons:
1. there were no effects in the group of people claiming damages, even after twenty-five years, and ;
2. Ogent Orange (as used in Vietnam) was a herbicide called 2-4, D ( round-up) mfrd by Dow chemical.
There are two forms : 2, 4, 5,-D 1sobutyl Dioxin,which has butyl Dioxin, which is fat soluble in the human body, and the other was 2,4 D Isopropyl Dioxin, which is water soluble in the human body.
This is a key differentiation 2,4,5 -D Isobutyl Dioxin ACCUMULATES addidtively IN THE TISSUES, whereasas 2,4- D Isopropyl Dioxin does not accumulate additively. The SODA proponents lost in court and went bankrupt as result.
Differentiating between the solutes of toxins is difficult after they have been metabolised (Chelated) in the biological process is very difficult, if not impossible, by normal lab procedures, because both form identical chelates through the metabolic process. The only real test involves tissue analysis post-mortem or biopsy.
Because of this differention, no ill effects to SODA proponents could be shown and their case was dismissed.
Because of a production overlap between the two types, all 2,4-D and 2,4, 5 -Dioxin was banned in Canada, except for licenced professional users. It is not available here in stores in any form. Licensed sprayer may use 2,4,5-D in carefully mixed and applied dosage rates. Now we are knee deep in weeds in our lawns FWIW , all DIOXIN is a hormone effective toxin
The reason I relate all this is because other available insecticides are differentiated to be water soluable without additive properties, but their trace elements are not differentiated in this way, as for 2,4-D and 2,4,5-D dioxin, as to cumulative effects, so measuring the trace amounts on vegetables is a crude indicator only that it was used. It does not identify the isotopes in the chelated form, but no matter. All fat soluble insecticide is bannnd in Canada. None of them are therefore additive toxins. That does not mean that they are harmless, NO, it means that they are not additive over time. Cumulative dosages do play a part in toxicity, but only if successive dosages are taken relatively rapidly, which is to say, faster than the body can expel then by normal bodily processes. (24 hrs usually.) There are exceptions in certain classes of toxins, but these do not include accepted insecticides. Crop sprayers et al must try to prevent frequent exposures to toxins considered non-cumulative, however, because of the frequency of potential exposure.
Malathion is now illegal for use in Canada
for that reason While not additive, it is very persistent in the body because of the way that it chemically binds(chelates) to normal body fats. And it is also very toxic. Ditto, DDT
There now, Dave. You must decide if I am pulling your leg or not. Have at it and report back to me in not more than three days...and show your work. Extra points for neatness, of course:drink:
This is just such fun, ain't it?
Jix
Hi Dave1949...I wonder about Autism and Glyphosate? My step grandson, who is now 17, has profound Autism Syndrome...Nobody knows what that is about.
Do you think that Roundup may be an issue in that , Dave?