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Rachel's Senses |
| Sense of Service Sense of Scholarship Sense of Stewardship Sense of Wonder Sense of Urgency Home Continuing Rachel's Work Contact RCC Sitemap |
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Our message concerns more than toxicity of chemical pesticides. |
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| Sense of Service |
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In describing the great outpouring of correspondence generated by Silent Spring, Rachel Carson wrote: "... the letters began to come immediately in enormous volume and they were not the sort of letters you could ignore...These letters were from people who were deeply concerned, from people who wanted to know what they could do. These letters must be answered." Since 1965 the Rachel Carson Council has been answering the letters, for they continue to come. The following anecdotes exemplify the sort of help we provide: |
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| Sense of Scholarship |
In 1992 the Rachel Carson Council published a major reference book, Basic Guide to Pesticides.
Using a chart format for convenient reference, the Guide lists substances by trade name, common name, and scientific name and then describes physical characteristics, EPA registration status, acute and chronic mammalian toxicity, carcinogenicity, and effects on wildlife. Pesticide related issues are discussed in detail in the Appendices.
The Guide prompted the following comment from a medical doctor:
As a scientist and a clinician who has consulted most of the major text books of human toxicology over the past 10 years, I find this (Basic Guide to Pesticides) to be one of my favorites.
The RCC has solved a major, infuriating problem of its competitors; i.e. how to locate a pesticide by its chemical name when one only knows its trade name.
RCC searches the medical and toxicological literature to provide information on the ways in which pesticides affect human health and the environment. We use primary sources for references in our publications wherever possible.
We are concerned with how the information is produced as well as its content. We rely on peer reviewed journals but do not reject out of hand anecdotal reports from citizens.
Recently, in response to citizen requests, information on less hazardous means of pest control has become a significant portion of our work. Alternative methods, to be credible, must be truly effective. Here also we verify our recommendations through consulting the published literature and contacting experts in various fields of endeavor.
Sense of Stewardship
Rachel Carson respected nature and believed that we should intervene in a protective way as responsible stewards, when necessary, to protect the environment. She pointed out the perils of disrupting natural communities, but recognized that inevitably society will attempt to manipulate nature.
A significant Council goal is to influence the way in which agricultural and horticultural intervention takes place for the long-range benefit of humans as well as other residents of the ecosystem.
Saving habitat alone is not enough. In order to survive, we must assure the preservation of many elements of the ecosystem. A forest is composed not just of trees but "...birds, ants, forest spiders, and soil bacteria..." (Carson, p. 258, 1962).
The Rachel Carson Council seeks to protect all forms of life, not only those we love or which capture our imagination--dolphins, elephants, eagles, and others--
but also more obscure creatures. The web of life depends on a variety of species, including earthworms, insects, and bacteria. These species need our good stewardship as much if not more than do the creatures that we perceive as having intrinsic value. As Daly and Cobb wrote in For the Common Good,
The interrelated whole would probably survive the extinction of the chimpanzees with very little damage, but it would be seriously disturbed by the extinction of some species of bacteria.
| Sense of Wonder |
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| These words are from The Sense of Wonder, by Rachel Carson, published posthumously in 1965 with photographs
by Charles Pratt. Love of the natural world was a pivotal theme in all of her work. She communicated a sense of
wonder even as she described the destructive effects of pesticides in Silent Spring. A significant portion of Rachel Carson Council's mission is one of fostering a sense of wonder and respect for nature. This we try to do in all our communications. In addition, we hope to develop through activities that expose children directly to nature a means of illuminating the fascinating web of life on earth. As parents, teachers, and children, through direct experience, increase their understanding and enhance their observation skills, we believe that an appreciation of the need for protecting the earth will evolve. |
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| Sense of Urgency |
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There are compelling reasons for no longer taking the senseless and frightening risks associated with poisonous chemicals: |
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- Organophosphate and carbamate chemicals which replaced DDT in the pesticide arsenal, although less persistent have greater immediate toxicity for people and wildlife. Poisoning of agricultural workers, gardeners, children, pets, birds, and fish have been associated with these agents. (Government programs to compile information on pesticide poisoning of humans and wildlife have been underfunded since the early 1980s.)
- "It is now generally accepted that the western world at least has witnessed a considerable decline in the quality of human sperm this century, coupled with a rise in malformations of the genitals and an increase in rates of testicular and breast cancers." (British Medical Journal August 5, 1995). Endocrine disruption, including reproductive disorders have been observed in various wildlife species. Chemical pesticides have been implicated in these phenomena.
- The incidence rate of certain cancers has increased alarmingly. Some of these-brain cancer, non-Hodgkins Lymphoma, Wilms' Tumor, breast cancer, and leukemia-are linked to pesticide exposure.
- Recent research has revealed that significant portions of our groundwater and surface water are now contaminated with pesticides. Decontamination is often prohibitively expensive.
- Exposure of young children to indoor and outdoor home pesticide applications, as well as to multiple pesticides in food and water, has not been considered by regulators when calculating combined impact of chemicals on this vulnerable population.
- Recently the U.S. EPA advised pregnant women to avoid or reduce their exposure to pesticides.
- Biological methods, more specific and frequently safer than chemical controls, are in some cases the only available means against pests which have developed resistance to traditional pesticides. Paradoxically, research on biological alternatives does not receive adequate support.
- Consumers lack information on pesticide toxicity and are misled by industry assurances that the chemicals are harmless "if used according to label instructions." Since many pesticides are still undergoing reregistration and most are sufficiently dangerous to require disposal as hazardous waste, this industry information appears to be quite incomplete.
- At least 12 wildlife species (two mammals, nine birds and one reptile) in the Great Lakes basin have experienced reproductive and other problems and/or population decreases since the 1960s that have been associated with chemical contaminants. (Fox 1993)
- Protection of humans and wildlife species from the subtle, chronic effects of pollution will require much more stringent regulations than those currently recommended to protect human populations from cancer. (Ludwig, 1993)
- The new biotechnology has enabled scientists to transfer genetic material between widely different life forms. Imprudent use of this technology may allow genetically engineered organisms to escape into wild populations which may adversely affect natural ecological balances. This area needs careful monitoring.
Rachel Carson Council, Inc.
PO Box 10779, Silver Spring, Maryland 20914
Phone: (301) 593-7507
e-mail: rccouncil@aol.com
| http://members.aol.com/rccouncil/ourpage/senses.htm |