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Date: | Sun, 6 Nov 2011 07:27:55 -0800 |
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>
> >I have not had any problems I can attribute to neonics in the past two
> years.
Glad to hear Stan!
> >treating the potato set itself, rather than foliar spraying or soil
> injection has greatly reduced (by an order of magnitude) the amount of
> imidacloprid used per acre/hectare, and the residue in succeeding crops.
This is clearly the best use of neonics--for treating the seed directly.
>
> >I continue to put bees in thiamethoxam seed treated canola. It does not
> have the long residual life of imidacloprid or clothianidin.
Thiomethoxam rapidly breaks down into clothianidin, so I'm not sure that
there is much reason to talk about thiomethoxam residual life.
> > I do not see increased loss from those bees before or after winter. I
> am told by the
> grower of most of the canola where I put bees that the thiamethoxam will
> only protect the canola seedlings for about three weeks after emergence.
>
Glad to hear that observation. Again, clearly the best use of
systemics--such that levels are reduced by the time that the plant grows
larger.
> >When canola was grown in fields following imidacloprid soil injected
> potatoes there were similar amounts of both neonics in both nectar and
> pollen, showing the much longer half life of imidacloprid.
>
I'm curious--could an alternative explanation be that there was initially a
much greater concentration of IMD due to its being injected?
>
> >As someone has pointed out in this discussion I would be most worried
> about
> the application of neonics on trees
>
> Ditto here, and for any other "landscape" types of uses.
--
Randy Oliver
Grass Valley, CA
www.ScientificBeekeeping.com
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