Tell Home Depot: Stop selling bee-killing pesticides
Neonic pesticides kill bees in huge numbers, yet Home Depot continues to sell them. We’re calling on Home Depot to stop.
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Bees are nature’s most effective pollinators, responsible for a third of all the food that we consume. But instead of being thanked, bees are dying at a horrifying rate to bee-killing pesticides known as neonicotinoids (neonics).
People often spray neonic pesticides on lawns, fields or gardens. When bees come into contact with these toxins, the damage is severe:
Neonics are partly responsible for the American bumblebee’s 90% drop in population.
Neonics are also extremely addictive. One study has shown that once bees get a taste of pesticides, bees actually prefer neonic-treated pollen to pesticide-free food. Perhaps neonics’ deadly appeal shouldn’t come as a surprise — they are closely related to nicotine.
Bees are essential creatures — all they want to do is buzz from flower to flower, fulfilling their natural role as pollinators. But with neonics, that need to pollinate is what seals the bees’ fate.
All of this is completely backward. People use pesticide to protect plants, but instead of doing that, neonics kill the pollinators that plants depend upon. What’s worse, many neonic pesticides are still openly sold, including at home improvement giant Home Depot.
That’s why we’re calling on Home Depot to stop selling these dangerous bee-killing pesticides and give bees a chance to buzz from flower to flower in safety.
Home Depot has already taken some measures to limit neonic pesticides. At the encouragement of Environment America and our national network, the company agreed to phase out neonics in all its plants by 2018.
But a partial phase-out isn’t sufficient. Because of neonic’s addictive qualities, bees will still choose pesticide-sprayed plants if they have the option. That’s why Home Depot also needs to stop selling neonic pesticides for lawn care and gardening.
Until we get all neonics out of the supply chain, bees will continue to die horrific deaths from the flowers that they try to pollinate.
Steve directs Environment America’s efforts to protect our public lands and waters and the species that depend on them. He led our successful campaign to win full and permanent funding for our nation’s best conservation and recreation program, the Land and Water Conservation Fund. He previously oversaw U.S. PIRG’s public health campaigns. Steve lives in Sacramento, California, with his family, where he enjoys biking and exploring Northern California.