I assume they respond to bait. Wasps, for example, go crazy over fish. I assume 
they like all edibles but what gets their motor running?
 
Use that for a trap. I like electricity although I suppose soapy water might 
do. My ex father in law observed flies go up not down so his traps worked 10 
times better than "big stinkys". Actual measurement BTW. The designers of the 
big stinky do not cater to the natural impulse of flies thus most escape.
 
Kirk

Peggy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Please suggest a way to control fire ants. We have not used pesticides
for years and continue to put Cedarcide (chopped us cedar around our
doors to keep them at bay. This rarely lasts very long and is big bulky
mess for tracking into the building. Thanks for suggestions.

Peggy 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Keith Addison
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2004 8:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Biofuel] US Blocks Phase Out of Lindane in North America

Twenty years this has been going on - well, much longer than that, 
but it's 20 years since lindane was fingered as lethal and put on the 
"Dirty Dozen" list of the world's most hazardous pesticides. You eat 
this stuff. What always strikes me as utterly weird is that the guys 
who lobby and shill for its continued use for the sake of the 
corporate bottom line, and who know very well what it is and what it 
does, go home to their wife and kids after a hard day at the office 
and they eat it too.

1995:

Dirty Dozen' update

The Pesticides Action Network (PAN) North America has produced an 
update of its international report card on 'Dirty Dozen' pesticides 
which shows that over 90 countries have now banned or restricted the 
use of the world's most hazardous pesticides. In spite of this, at 
least 58 million pounds of these chemicals were exported from the US 
between 1991 and 1994, many to countries that have prohibited use.
The Dirty Dozen pesticides are aldicarb, chlordane, heptachlor, 
chlordimeform, DBCP, DDT, the 'drins' (aldrin, dieldrin, endrin), 
EDB, HCH/BHC and lindane, paraquat, parathion and methyl parathion, 
pentachlorophenol (PCP), toxaphene and 2,4,5-T. The target on these 
began ten years ago and has been successful in raising awareness 
globally about the extreme danger to human health and the environment 
of many pesticides. 
In many countries, growing rejection of toxic pesticides has been 
accompanied by increased reliance on integrated pest management and 
other alternatives.

The 1995 'Dirty Dozen' Pesticides Chart is available from PAN North 
America, PAN regional offices (addresses on p.2) and groups, 
including the Pesticides Trust [now PAN UK].

[This article first appeared in Pesticides News No. 30, December 1995,
page 11]

http://www.panna.org/resources/documents/dirtyDozenChart.dv.html
PANNA: Demise of the Dirty Dozen 1995 Chart

http://www.panna.org/resources/gpc/gpc_199904.09.1.08.dv.html
PANNA: Dirty Dozen Pesticides: Banned But Still Traded
April 1999

------

===========================================
P A N U P S
Pesticide Action Network Updates Service
===========================================

US Blocks Phase Out of Lindane in North America
October 7, 2004

Last week, U.S. representatives parted company with Canada and Mexico 
and announced plans to allow continued use of the pesticide lindane 
that persists in air and water and has been found at high levels in 
the Artic. Canada plans to eliminate agricultural uses of lindane by 
the end of 2004 and Mexico plans a full phase out of agricultural, 
veterinary and pharmaceutical uses of the pesticide. Representatives 
from the three countries met in Montreal, Canada September 28-30, 
2004 to draft a North American Regional Action Plan (NARAP) for 
lindane through the Commission for Environmental Cooperation of North 
America established by the North American Free Trade Association 
(NAFTA).

Public health, indigenous and environmental groups have called for 
elimination of the pesticide lindane, a neurotoxin banned in 52 
countries and restricted in 33 more. Pam Miller, of Alaska Community 
Action on Toxics and the official Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) 
representative on the task force, called the U.S. position allowing 
continued use of lindane "downright shameful" urging the U.S. to join 
the growing movement to eliminate lindane worldwide.

Fifty-eight public health, indigenous and environmental organizations 
recently sent a joint letter to U.S. agency officials and Task Force 
members urging elimination of lindane. More than 400 health care 
professionals in the U.S. sent a similar letter, and more than 800 
individuals signed a petition to ban lindane. (See PANUPS Action 
Alert: Ban Lindane Now! on the PANNA website.)

Environmental groups have also submitted a request to Bayer 
CropScience to voluntarily withdraw lindane products from the North 
American market. Bayer recently acquired Gustafson LLC, the primary 
distributor in the U.S. of lindane seed treatment products.

International treaties on toxic chemicals have also targeted lindane. 
Included on the Prior Informed Consent list of hazardous chemicals 
in the Rotterdam Convention, lindane will also likely be one of the 
top candidates considered for addition to the list of chemicals 
slated for global elimination under the Stockholm Convention on 
Persistent Organic Pollutants.

Lindane is a known neurotoxin that causes seizures, damages the 
nervous system, and weakens the immune system. Exposure may also 
cause cancer and disrupt the human and animal hormone systems. 
Because lindane is highly persistent and travels globally via air and 
water, its continued use in agriculture poses an exposure risk to 
people far from the source. Lindane is now one of the most abundant 
pesticides in Arctic air, water, and wildlife; northern indigenous 
peoples consuming traditional diets risk lindane exposures above 
levels considered safe. Lindane residues have also been reported in a 
variety of common foods in the U.S.

Pharmaceutical use of lindane also contaminates drinking water 
sources. The Los Angeles County Sanitation District estimates that 
one dose of a lindane treatment for head lice can pollute six million 
gallons of water to levels exceeding drinking water standards. This 
threat to clean drinking water, and the enormous costs of clean up, 
prompted California to ban lindane shampoos and lotions in 2002. Mark 
Miller, MD, of the University of California at San Francisco 
Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit, an academic 
representative to the task force meeting in Montreal said that more 
effective and less toxic treatments exist for headlice. Children are 
particularly vulnerable to this chemical that presents a danger to 
the young nervous system, he added.

The 2002 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Re-registration 
Eligibility Decision allows lindane to be used as seed treatment for 
six grain crops: corn, wheat, barley, oats, rye, and sorghum. These 
seed treatments account for 99% of lindane use in the U.S. Up to 
233,000 lbs of lindane active ingredient are used annually in the 
U.S. on seeds.

The draft North American Regional Action Plan for lindane is 
scheduled to be open for public comment in January 2005.

Sources: News Release, September 28, 3004 PANNA, 
http://www.epa.gov/REDs/factsheets/lindane_fs.htm; Statement in 
Support of the Elimination of Lindane Use in North America, PANNA, 
Alaska Community Action on Toxics; North American Regional Action 
Plan on Lindane, Background Document, Commission on Environmental 
Cooperation of North America, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED], website: 
http://www.cec.org ; PANNA, Global Pesticide Campaigner, August, 2004.

Contacts: PANNA, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, email, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] website http://www.akaction.org/.

PANUPS is a weekly email news service providing resource guides and 
reporting on pesticide issues that don't always get coverage by the 
mainstream media. It's produced by Pesticide Action Network North 
America, a non-profit and non-governmental organization working to 
advance sustainable alternatives to pesticides worldwide.

You can join our efforts! We gladly accept donations for our work and 
all contributions are tax deductible in the United States. Visit 
http://www.panna.org/donate.

===========================================
Back issues of PANUPS are available online at:
http://www.panna.org/resources/panups.html
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