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Sweeter Than Honey: Major Retailers to Phase Out Bee-killing Pesticides

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Tuesday, December 29, 2015   

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Winter months have taken a toll on Tennessee's honeybees in recent years, but beekeepers across the country are buzzing about major retailer Home Depot's decision to phase out the sale of flowering plants using pesticides that can kill bees.

Neonicotinoids, believed to be a major contributor to global bee declines, have commonly been used in growing the plants sold in large and small commercial nurseries. Home Depot spokesman Stephen Holmes said they're doing what they can to remove the stress on the world's bee population.

"We understand the importance of the bee population and greatly appreciate that," he said. "If, in fact, 'neonics' are having a negative impact on those pollinators, then we want to be a part of the solution."

So far, Home Depot said it has removed the pesticide from 80 percent of its plants, with plans for a complete phaseout by 2018. Lowe's has announced it will stop selling plants on which these pesticides are used by spring 2019.

Holmes said Home Depot began the process last year when it started labeling plants grown with the pesticide, but added that it's up to consumers to be aware of what they're planting in their gardens.

"Most all nurseries and sellers of live goods, they have some level of 'neonic' treatment on many of their plants," he said.

Florida and California still require that plants grown and sold there use neonicotinoids to prevent pest problems.

Earlier this year, the White House established a national strategy for saving the nation's bees. It includes a plan to work with the Environmental Protection Agency to review the risks posed by "neonics" and the desire to limit their use in areas where large populations of pollinators may be present. Details of the White House strategy are online at whitehouse.gov.

According to the website BeeInformed.org, Tennessee saw a winter honeybee loss last year of 36 percent.


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