Pesticides A Toxic Time Bomb in Our Midst

(Dana P.) #1

may be appropriate. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) may include crop rotation,
biological control, and soil analysis and conditioning.^46


Health Effects


When pesticides are found in water supplies, they normally are not present in high
enough concentrations to cause acute health effects such as chemical burns, nausea, or
convulsion. Instead, they typically occur in trace levels, and the concern is primarily
for their potential to cause chronic health problems. To estimate chronic toxicity, labo-
ratory animals are exposed to lower-than-lethal concentrations for extended periods of
time. Measurements are made of the incidence of cancer, birth defects, genetic muta-
tions, or other problems such as damage to the liver or the central nervous system.
Although we may encounter many toxic substances in our daily lives, in low
enough concentrations they do not impair our health. Caffeine, for example, is regu-
larly consumed in coffee, tea, chocolate, and soft drinks. Although the amount of caf-
feine consumed in a normal diet does not cause illness, just fifty times this amount is
sufficient to kill a human. Similarly, the oxalic acid found in rhubarb and spinach is
harmless at low concentrations found in these foods, but will lead to kidney damage
or death at higher doses.
Laboratory measurements of a pesticide’s toxicity must be interpreted in the context
of its potential hazard under actual field conditions. Pesticides by definition are toxic
to at least some forms of life, but whether or not a particular pesticide in groundwater
is hazardous to human health depends on its concentration, how much is absorbed
from water or other sources, the duration of exposure to the chemical, and how quickly
the compound is metabolized and excreted from the body. Drinking-water guidelines
are aimed at keeping pesticides at levels below those that are considered to cause any
health effects in humans. They are derived from laboratory data using one of two
methods, depending on whether or not the compound causes cancer.^47
Pesticide contamination of groundwater is a national issue because of the wide-
spread use of pesticides, the expense and difficulty of cleansing groundwater, and the
fact that groundwater is used for drinking water by about 50 percent of Americans.
Concern about pesticides in groundwater is especially acute in rural agricultural areas,
where more than 95 percent of the population relies on groundwater for their drink-
ing water, although application rates and the variety of pesticides used may be greater
in urban areas. Weed killers, bug killers, and other pesticides still contaminate thou-
sands of water supplies nationwide. For hundreds of Midwestern communities, pesti-
cide runoff to rivers and streams results in tap water commonly contaminated with
five or more weed killers during peak runoff each spring and summer. Communities
that use reservoirs are exposed to these mixtures year-round. Everyone who drinks the
water is affected, including millions of babies who consume pesticides when parents
feed them infant formula reconstituted with tap water. The EPA’s review of the
pesticide that most commonly contaminates tap water—the carcinogenic weed killer
atrazine—has stalled, despite the fact that it contaminates some 1,500 water systems


The Pesticide Problem | 13
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