In the "They still don't get it" category, I read today in "Inside R & D" (Vol. 24 No. 25) that the USDA is developing new insecticides for the California Medfly problem that will help calm the public alarm over "...clouds of Malathion sprayed by helicopters across California...". The new compounds, phloxine B and uranine, are dyes that become toxic upon exposure to light (as in the transparent gut of a bug). Since mammals are not transparent, they are not affected. The article ends with "Still to be determined: Do the dyes break down into compounds that harm crops?" Once again, our six-legged friends in the Apis genera get classed with the other bugs in a notch somewhat below crops and mammals.