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998 results for “Riedler”
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15:01
Sie haben unseren Tunnel nach Lützerath gefunden
#FecherBleibt #LuetziBleibt #EichiBleibt #heibobleibt -
2x PhD Scholarships in Aquaculture Sustainability (Open until filled)
#phd #scholarship #phdlife #aquaculture #sustainability #academicjobs @jobRxiv @PeerJ @peerjlife #aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU
@jess_rieder @faofish @raqjournal -
World’s first breeding of #bluefin #tuna in a land-based facility achieved
#aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU
@jess_rieder @faofish @raqjournal -
Fisherman Shocked After Reeling in #Swordfish Covered in Round Strange Holes
tinyurl.com/37czewb4
#aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU
@jess_rieder @faofish -
#Metagenomics and metabarcoding experimental choices and their impact on #microbial #community characterization in #freshwater recirculating #aquaculture systems
https://environmentalmicrobiome.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40793-023-00459-z
#aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU
@jess_rieder @hera @Napaaqtuk @bioRxiv_microbio @MicrobioJC @hosmic -
Der nächste Vortrag kommt aus Weimar. Dr. Jens-Jörg Riederer referiert nun über die „Anbietungspflicht städtischer Kultureinrichtungen zwischen Konkurrenz und Kooperation“.
Hinter der Kultur und dem Tourismus als größten Wirtschaftsfaktoren stünden viele andere Bereiche der Stadt zurück. Umso mehr große nicht-städtische Kultureinrichtungen träten in Konkurrenz miteinander, mit den städtischen Einrichtungen und damit auch mit dem Stadtarchiv.
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Couvent des Minimes à #SaintMartindHères (#Isère) Construction XVe siècle, XVIIe siècle. Les parties subsistantes du cloître ; la chapelle attenante ; le sol de l'ancienne église (cad. BL 258, 260, 377, 415) : ...
Suite 👉 https://monumentum.fr/monument-historique/pa00117260/saint-martin-dheres-couvent-des-minimes
#Patrimoine #MonumentHistorique
Photo CC-BY-SA 4.0 : Matthieu RieglerEnglish : This photo has been ta
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Croix en pierre à #Sassenage (#Isère) Croix en pierre : classement par arrêté du 9 juin 1943.
Suite 👉 https://monumentum.fr/monument-historique/pa00117280/sassenage-croix-en-pierre
#Patrimoine #MonumentHistorique
Photo CC-BY-SA 4.0 : Matthieu RieglerEnglish : This photo has been ta
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Fontaine à #Sassenage (#Isère) Fontaine : inscription par arrêté du 9 juin 1943.
Suite 👉 https://monumentum.fr/monument-historique/pa00117283/sassenage-fontaine
#Patrimoine #MonumentHistorique
Photo CC-BY-SA 4.0 : Matthieu RieglerEnglish : This photo has been ta
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Fontaine à #Sassenage (#Isère) Construction XIXe siècle. Fontaine : inscription par arrêté du 10 juin 1943.
Suite 👉 https://monumentum.fr/monument-historique/pa00117282/sassenage-fontaine
#Patrimoine #MonumentHistorique
Photo CC-BY-SA 4.0 : Matthieu RieglerEnglish : This photo has been ta
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AB:GLANZ - Farbbringer (Lukas Gosch) / Reldnir (Stefan Rindler) / Homvnkvlvs (Claudio Petric)
Rhizom, Freitag, 10. Oktober um 17:00 MESZ
Eröffnung: 10.10.2025, 17 Uhr Einlass/18 Uhr Beginn
Weitere Öffnungszeiten: 11.10.2025 – 26.10.2025, immer Do-So, 18-21 Uhr
AB:GLANZ ist eine gemeinschaftliche Ausstellung der drei Grazer Künstler – Reldnir (Stefan Rindler), Homvnkvlvs (Claudio Petric) und Farbbringer (Lukas Gosch) – die gleichermaßen in der bildenden Kunst wie in der extremen Musikszene (Death/Black Metal) verwurzelt sind.
Oft lediglich als Ergänzung zur Musik verstanden und eng mit den Projekten NEKRODEUS, MYSTERIVM XARXES und ELLENDE verwoben, werden diese visuellen Arbeiten aus ihrer Rolle als Beiwerk herausgelöst und in den Kunstraum überführt.
Zwischen Gesellschaft und Subkultur entfaltet sich ein Ort, in dem Klang, Atmosphäre und Zugehörigkeit visuell manifest werden und sich zu einer kollektiven Erfahrung verdichten. Eingebettet in weitere Bezugswerke der Künstler, verhandelt die Ausstellung in konfrontativer Bildsprache ein (sub)kulturelles Vokabular für die existenzielle Gegensätzlichkeit unseres Selbst – von Leben und Tod, von Gemeinschaft und Isolation, von Dunkel und Licht. Die Kunst bewegt sich, wie die Musik selbst, an den Rändern: wo sie gegen Konvention antritt und dem Unsagbaren wie zutiefst Menschlichem eine Sprache schenkt.
(Sujet: Petric/Gosch/Rindler)
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#batman #arkhamcity #riddlertrophy #videogames
All the guides say that you put the explosive gel on the top question marks and quick-fire batarang the bottom ones, but that you have to be quick and precise. Well, I just did it the other way; gel the bottom ones and batarang the top ones. No running required, just hop on the fence, you can hit two from one spot, jump over and hit the last one. Done and dusted. This was my ”let’s test it” run and it worked instantly.
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Alte Inschriften
Was bei den Engadiner Häusen die Sgraffiti, sind bei den Berner Oberländer Chalets die Fassaden-Beschriftungen. Meist zumindest das Baujahr und allenfalls das Jahr der Renovation, vielfach aber auch zusätzliche Texte: Bibelsprüche, Segenswünsche, bisweilen mehrere Zeilen Text.
Immer sind die Inschriften mehr oder weniger geschnörkelt, meist jedoch so, dass sie mit etwas Mühe zumindest halbwegs zu entziffern sind. In Adelboden, etwas ausserhalb – für die Ortskundigen: in Richtung Ausserschwand -, begegneten wir zwei alten Chalets, bei denen wir die Inschriften bestenfalls halbwegs entziffern konnten. So alt und verschnörkelt waren die Inschriften.
Beim ersten Haus konnten wir auf der letzten Zeile entziffern, wer es wann gebaut hatte: „Gebauen durch Peter Rieder und Susanna Pieren. Im Jahre des Herren 1771. Der höchste Gott dies Haus … Vor Feur und allerlei Gefahr.“ Beim zweiten Haus hatten wir noch weniger eine Chance.
Sonst jemand?
#Adelboden #Ausserschwand #Baujahr #BernerOberland #Beschriftung #Bibelspruch #Chalet #Engadin #entziffern #Fassade #geschnörkelt #Inschriften #Renovation #Segenswunsch #Sgraffiti
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Peek.
Riederfurka, #Wallis #Schweiz
#Mountains #Sightskiing #ski -
#Midgut Bacterial #Microbiota of 12 #Fish Species from a Marine Protected Area in the #Aegean Sea (#Greece)
@jess_rieder #gutmicrobes #hostmicrobiota #hostmicrobe #microbialecology #microbeinteractions #Symbionauts #symbiosis #MicrobialInteractions #MicrobialLife #MicrobialDiversity #aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU #microbiome
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#Midgut Bacterial #Microbiota of 12 #Fish Species from a Marine Protected Area in the #Aegean Sea (#Greece)
@jess_rieder #gutmicrobes #hostmicrobiota #hostmicrobe #microbialecology #microbeinteractions #Symbionauts #symbiosis #MicrobialInteractions #MicrobialLife #MicrobialDiversity #aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU #microbiome
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#Midgut Bacterial #Microbiota of 12 #Fish Species from a Marine Protected Area in the #Aegean Sea (#Greece)
@jess_rieder #gutmicrobes #hostmicrobiota #hostmicrobe #microbialecology #microbeinteractions #Symbionauts #symbiosis #MicrobialInteractions #MicrobialLife #MicrobialDiversity #aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU #microbiome
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#Midgut Bacterial #Microbiota of 12 #Fish Species from a Marine Protected Area in the #Aegean Sea (#Greece)
@jess_rieder #gutmicrobes #hostmicrobiota #hostmicrobe #microbialecology #microbeinteractions #Symbionauts #symbiosis #MicrobialInteractions #MicrobialLife #MicrobialDiversity #aquaculture #aquacultureeurope #aquaculturenutrition #CIRCLESEU #microbiome
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Me, like a monkey, looking for new blog entries 2 days after #dolphin_emu posted their last one.
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After the last episode of Game Changer on Dropout, I'm convinced you could drop Sam Reich in Gotham and he'd immediately join Batman's rogues gallery as The Gamesmaster. Somewhere above Kiteman but below The Riddler.
His catchphrase would be "I've been here the whole time!".
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a row of wilhelminian style apartment buildings on Riehler Str.
#architecture #kphoto -
Ariane Raedler and Katharina Huber win team combined at Olympics
CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Neither Ariane Raedler nor Katharina Hube…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Sports #2026Milan-CortinaOlympicGames #2026WinterOlympics #Alpineskiing #ArianeRaedler #AustriaOlympicTeam #EmmaAicher #Generalnews #JacquelineWiles #KatharinaHuber #KiraWeidle-Winkelmann #MikaelaShiffrin #Olympicgames #PaulaMoltzan #SendtoAppleNews #Worldnews
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/460734/ -
Welcome to another episode of Play Comics, where we dive into the pixelated world of superheroes and their digital escapades! This week, we’re strapping on our capes and booting up our Game Boy Advances to tackle Justice League: Injustice for All. Based on the beloved Justice League Unlimited cartoon, this game lets you step into the boots of your favorite heroes, even if the gameplay sometimes feels like it’s stuck in the Phantom Zone.
Joining us for this heroic journey is the illustrious AJ Malacarne from Gamma Head Press. Known for their penchant for the absurd and psychedelic storytelling, AJ brings a unique perspective to our discussion. Will they find the game as thrilling as a battle with Darkseid, or as perplexing as The Riddler’s latest scheme? Tune in to find out!
So grab your Batarang, call in your sidekicks, and prepare for a supercharged episode that promises more twists and turns than a Luthor-led plot. Let’s see if Injustice for All can truly do justice to the Justice League!
Learn such things as:
- How can you create a show where off screen characters are treated as if they actually exist all the time?
- How does the platform a game is going on impact the development and design of that game?
- Which characters really need to show up in new Justice League experiences?
- And so much more!
You can find AJ on Twitter @AJMalacarne, BlueSky @ajmalacarne, Instagram @aj_malacarne, Threads @aj_malacarne, and of course their newsletter Gamma Head Press.
If you want to be a guest on the show please check out the Be a A Guest on the Show page and let me know what you’re interested in.
If you want to help support the show check out the Play Comics Patreon page or head over to the Support page if you want to go another route. You can also check out the Play Comics Merch Store.
Play Comics is part of the Gonna Geek Network, which is a wonderful collection of geeky podcasts. Be sure to check out the other shows on Gonna Geek if you need more of a nerd fix.
You can find Play Comics @playcomics.bsky.social on Bluesky, @playcomicscaston Twitter and in the Play Comics Podcast Fan Groupon Facebook.
A big thanks to Chatsunami and Tales from the Backlog for the promos today.
Intro/Outro Music by Backing Track, who might actually be multiple heroes in a trench coat.
https://playcomics.com/justice-league-injustice-for-all-with-aj-malacarne-gamma-head-press/
#AJMalacarne #Batman #DC #GameBoyAdvance #GreenLantern #HawkGirl #MartianManhunter #Midway #Saffire #Superman #TheFlash #WomderWoman
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Seattle Statement on Glyphosate and Public Health
This statement was finalized and adopted at the Seattle Glyphosate Symposium, which took place 25-26 March, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. The statement’s authors are listed below.
Glyphosate, a broad-spectrum herbicide (plant killer) typically marketed as Roundup, is the world’s most widely used pesticide. The diversity and magnitude of glyphosate uses in agriculture, in forestry and in industrial, commercial, residential and municipal settings have grown dramatically since first approval in 1974.
Humans are exposed to glyphosate through direct spraying and other skin contact, through occupational or residential proximity to sprayed areas, through exposure to dust and through consumption of food and water contaminated with glyphosate residues. Food is the main route of exposure for most people while occupational exposures are typically the highest.
National and international biomonitoring surveys detect glyphosate in samples collected from 70-80% of all people examined, including children.
Glyphosate and glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) harm human health and can cause cancer. The comprehensive evidence supports this conclusion, with the strongest epidemiological evidence linking exposure to increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system.
There is additional evidence from human and/or animal studies that glyphosate and GBHs increase the risk of multiple adverse health effects in addition to cancer, including diseases of the kidney and liver, and impacts to the reproductive, endocrine, neurological, and other metabolic systems. Children, infants and fetuses are the most susceptible.
Further strong evidence finds that glyphosate and GBHs cause genetic damage, oxidative stress, and hormonal disruption — biological changes that can set disease in motion. Our understanding of glyphosate’s ability to cause these changes has developed from multiple lines of evidence in animal, human and in vitro studies.
Additional research is needed to better understand the full extent of glyphosate’s and GBH’s effects on human health and the underlying mechanisms involved, such as epigenetic alterations, microbiome disruption and endocrine effects.
The evidence that glyphosate and GBHs harm human health at levels of current use is now so strong that no additional delays in regulation of glyphosate can be justified. Regulatory agencies in countries around the world should treat glyphosate and GBHs as hazardous, as some countries have started to do. Agencies should act without further delay to limit their use, or eliminate them if legally required, to protect public health.
Preventive measures to reduce human exposures while handling and applying glyphosate are accessible, proven effective, and inexpensive. These actions should be implemented without delay while research continues.
Safeguards must be implemented to ensure that any reduction in glyphosate use does not result in regrettable increases in the use of other equally or more harmful pesticides, for example paraquat.
Glyphosate is not the only pesticide that has been inadequately evaluated or regulated. The approval processes globally for all existing and new pesticides are weak and fail to protect human health, especially the health of infants and children. This system needs to be fundamentally revised. Regulatory agencies need to make pesticide approval decisions based on a more comprehensive and unbiased suite of health effects data. If pesticide use is approved, these agencies must closely monitor use, exposure data and harmful outcomes, especially for susceptible and highly exposed groups. The costs of obtaining such data must be borne by the pesticide industry, but the testing must be conducted by laboratories and organizations independent of the pesticide industry and free from financial conflicts of interest (COI), defined as funding from industries and trade associations that have a financial stake in the outcome.
Risk-assessment methods and processes used to evaluate pesticides must be updated to use best-available science, including: using transparent, consistent and unbiased approaches to evaluate all the evidence; accounting for human variability and susceptible populations such as fetuses, infants and children, and highly exposed populations such as farmworkers; accounting for cumulative exposures and risks for pesticides that contribute to common adverse health outcomes; and identifying adverse health effects and risks at all exposure levels. This is clearly not the case now.
All scientific evidence used in pesticide evaluations must be publicly available, not labeled proprietary or restricted to active ingredients, and must comply with laws protecting human subjects in research. Financial COI, which do not include government funding, must be addressed throughout the research and regulatory processes, including accounting for bias from industry-funded studies, and ensuring that individuals with financial COI are barred from participating in scientific advisory panels and other bodies that formally review scientific data.
Ultimately, pesticide use must be reduced overall, and eliminated to the extent possible. This is consistent with the United Nations Global Biodiversity Framework global target to reduce pesticide risks by 50% by 2030 relative to 2010–2020 and replace pesticides with safer, more sustainable pest control systems that rely more on prevention than treatment. This is imperative for the health of humans, ecosystems and future generations.
Signed by (Affiliations noted for identification purposes only)
Lianne Sheppard, PhD
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonNathan Donley, PhD
Center for Biological Diversity, Olympia, WashingtonCynthia Curl, MS, PhD
School of Public and Population Health, Boise State University, Boise, IdahoLuoping Zhang, PhD, MS
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CaliforniaRashmi Joglekar, PhD
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CaliforniaDr. Kurt Straif, MD, PhD
Boston College, Massachusetts, and ISGlobal, Barcelona, SpainAudrey E. Tran Lam, MPH
Center for Energy & Environmental Education, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, IowaDr. Lee A. Evslin, MD, FAAP
Hawaii Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Kapaa, HawaiiAlice Livingston-Ortolani, PhD
University of Sussex, Brighton, United KingdomBrenda Eskenazi, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaPeter Clausing, PhD
Pesticide Action Network, GermanyMaryse F. Bouchard, PhD
Institut national de la recherche scientifique, Montréal, CanadaRobin Mesnage, PhD
King’s College London, Department of Nutritional Sciences, GermanyNaomi Oreskes, PhD
Harvard University, Cambridge, MassachusettsGrant Hopkins
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonRobert Gunier, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaNaila Khalil, MBBS, MPH, PhD
Wright State University, Dayton, OhioAmanda Claire Starbuck, MA
Food & Water Watch, Longmont, ColoradoJohann Zaller, PhD
BOKU University, Institute of Zoology, Vienna, AustriaDr. Janet Perlman, MD, MPH, FAAP
University of California at San Francisco, Berkeley, CaliforniaDr. Eve Shapiro, MD, MPH
Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Tucson, ArizonaDr. Dianne Glover, MD
Providence/Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, WashingtonSun-Young Kim, PhD
National Cancer Center of Korea, Goyang, KoreaMuhammad Zahid, PhD, MPH
College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NebraskaAndrew Smith, PhD
Chief Scientific Officer, Rodale Institute, Kutztown, PennsylvaniaTracey Woodruff, PhD, MPH
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CaliforniaDr. Philip J. Landrigan, MD, MSc, FAAP
Boston College, Boston, MassachusettsChristopher J. Portier, PhD
Former Director, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Former Director, National Center for Environmental Health, Former Associate Director, National Toxicology Program, Thune, SwitzerlandDr. Daniele Mandrioli, MD, PhD
Secretary General, Collegium Ramazzini, Bologna, ItalyDr. Bruce Lanphear, MD, MPH
Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, CanadaCharles Benbrook, PhD
Benbrook Consulting Services, Lakeville, MaineDr. Beate Ritz, MD, PhD, FSPH
University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CaliforniaAlexandra Muñoz, MS, PhD
Independent Toxicologist, Miami, FloridaAnne Riederer, PhD
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonJennifer Fung, PhD
University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CaliforniaCatherine Hong
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonKarie L. Knoke
Benbrook Consulting Service, Sandpoint, IdahoDr. Dennis D. Weisenburger, MD
University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NebraskaAlexander A. Kaurov, PhD
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New ZealandKelly Ryerson, MBA
American Regeneration, Miami, FloridaYogi Hendlin, PhD
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The NetherlandsMelinda Hemmelgarn, MS, RD
Beyond Pesticides, Columbia, MissouriKendra Klein, PhD
Friends of the Earth, Washington D.C.Erik Millstone, PhD
Science Policy Research Unit, University of Sussex, England, United KingdomNoreen Mucha, MPA
Wisconsin Organics, Waukesha, WisconsinDr. Kambria Beck Holder, MD
Family Physician, Kilauea, HawaiiDr. Stephanie Blount, MD
Pediatrician, West Palm Beach, FloridaCarsten A. Brühl, PhD
Technical University Kaiserslautern – Landau, Institute for Environmental Sciences, Landau, GermanyDr. Ana M. Mora, MD, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaDr. Michael W. Schwartz, MD
#BigGovt #health #law #medicalScience #poison
Professor of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington -
Seattle Statement on Glyphosate and Public Health
This statement was finalized and adopted at the Seattle Glyphosate Symposium, which took place 25-26 March, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. The statement’s authors are listed below.
Glyphosate, a broad-spectrum herbicide (plant killer) typically marketed as Roundup, is the world’s most widely used pesticide. The diversity and magnitude of glyphosate uses in agriculture, in forestry and in industrial, commercial, residential and municipal settings have grown dramatically since first approval in 1974.
Humans are exposed to glyphosate through direct spraying and other skin contact, through occupational or residential proximity to sprayed areas, through exposure to dust and through consumption of food and water contaminated with glyphosate residues. Food is the main route of exposure for most people while occupational exposures are typically the highest.
National and international biomonitoring surveys detect glyphosate in samples collected from 70-80% of all people examined, including children.
Glyphosate and glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) harm human health and can cause cancer. The comprehensive evidence supports this conclusion, with the strongest epidemiological evidence linking exposure to increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system.
There is additional evidence from human and/or animal studies that glyphosate and GBHs increase the risk of multiple adverse health effects in addition to cancer, including diseases of the kidney and liver, and impacts to the reproductive, endocrine, neurological, and other metabolic systems. Children, infants and fetuses are the most susceptible.
Further strong evidence finds that glyphosate and GBHs cause genetic damage, oxidative stress, and hormonal disruption — biological changes that can set disease in motion. Our understanding of glyphosate’s ability to cause these changes has developed from multiple lines of evidence in animal, human and in vitro studies.
Additional research is needed to better understand the full extent of glyphosate’s and GBH’s effects on human health and the underlying mechanisms involved, such as epigenetic alterations, microbiome disruption and endocrine effects.
The evidence that glyphosate and GBHs harm human health at levels of current use is now so strong that no additional delays in regulation of glyphosate can be justified. Regulatory agencies in countries around the world should treat glyphosate and GBHs as hazardous, as some countries have started to do. Agencies should act without further delay to limit their use, or eliminate them if legally required, to protect public health.
Preventive measures to reduce human exposures while handling and applying glyphosate are accessible, proven effective, and inexpensive. These actions should be implemented without delay while research continues.
Safeguards must be implemented to ensure that any reduction in glyphosate use does not result in regrettable increases in the use of other equally or more harmful pesticides, for example paraquat.
Glyphosate is not the only pesticide that has been inadequately evaluated or regulated. The approval processes globally for all existing and new pesticides are weak and fail to protect human health, especially the health of infants and children. This system needs to be fundamentally revised. Regulatory agencies need to make pesticide approval decisions based on a more comprehensive and unbiased suite of health effects data. If pesticide use is approved, these agencies must closely monitor use, exposure data and harmful outcomes, especially for susceptible and highly exposed groups. The costs of obtaining such data must be borne by the pesticide industry, but the testing must be conducted by laboratories and organizations independent of the pesticide industry and free from financial conflicts of interest (COI), defined as funding from industries and trade associations that have a financial stake in the outcome.
Risk-assessment methods and processes used to evaluate pesticides must be updated to use best-available science, including: using transparent, consistent and unbiased approaches to evaluate all the evidence; accounting for human variability and susceptible populations such as fetuses, infants and children, and highly exposed populations such as farmworkers; accounting for cumulative exposures and risks for pesticides that contribute to common adverse health outcomes; and identifying adverse health effects and risks at all exposure levels. This is clearly not the case now.
All scientific evidence used in pesticide evaluations must be publicly available, not labeled proprietary or restricted to active ingredients, and must comply with laws protecting human subjects in research. Financial COI, which do not include government funding, must be addressed throughout the research and regulatory processes, including accounting for bias from industry-funded studies, and ensuring that individuals with financial COI are barred from participating in scientific advisory panels and other bodies that formally review scientific data.
Ultimately, pesticide use must be reduced overall, and eliminated to the extent possible. This is consistent with the United Nations Global Biodiversity Framework global target to reduce pesticide risks by 50% by 2030 relative to 2010–2020 and replace pesticides with safer, more sustainable pest control systems that rely more on prevention than treatment. This is imperative for the health of humans, ecosystems and future generations.
Signed by (Affiliations noted for identification purposes only)
Lianne Sheppard, PhD
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonNathan Donley, PhD
Center for Biological Diversity, Olympia, WashingtonCynthia Curl, MS, PhD
School of Public and Population Health, Boise State University, Boise, IdahoLuoping Zhang, PhD, MS
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CaliforniaRashmi Joglekar, PhD
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CaliforniaDr. Kurt Straif, MD, PhD
Boston College, Massachusetts, and ISGlobal, Barcelona, SpainAudrey E. Tran Lam, MPH
Center for Energy & Environmental Education, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, IowaDr. Lee A. Evslin, MD, FAAP
Hawaii Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Kapaa, HawaiiAlice Livingston-Ortolani, PhD
University of Sussex, Brighton, United KingdomBrenda Eskenazi, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaPeter Clausing, PhD
Pesticide Action Network, GermanyMaryse F. Bouchard, PhD
Institut national de la recherche scientifique, Montréal, CanadaRobin Mesnage, PhD
King’s College London, Department of Nutritional Sciences, GermanyNaomi Oreskes, PhD
Harvard University, Cambridge, MassachusettsGrant Hopkins
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonRobert Gunier, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaNaila Khalil, MBBS, MPH, PhD
Wright State University, Dayton, OhioAmanda Claire Starbuck, MA
Food & Water Watch, Longmont, ColoradoJohann Zaller, PhD
BOKU University, Institute of Zoology, Vienna, AustriaDr. Janet Perlman, MD, MPH, FAAP
University of California at San Francisco, Berkeley, CaliforniaDr. Eve Shapiro, MD, MPH
Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Tucson, ArizonaDr. Dianne Glover, MD
Providence/Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, WashingtonSun-Young Kim, PhD
National Cancer Center of Korea, Goyang, KoreaMuhammad Zahid, PhD, MPH
College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NebraskaAndrew Smith, PhD
Chief Scientific Officer, Rodale Institute, Kutztown, PennsylvaniaTracey Woodruff, PhD, MPH
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CaliforniaDr. Philip J. Landrigan, MD, MSc, FAAP
Boston College, Boston, MassachusettsChristopher J. Portier, PhD
Former Director, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Former Director, National Center for Environmental Health, Former Associate Director, National Toxicology Program, Thune, SwitzerlandDr. Daniele Mandrioli, MD, PhD
Secretary General, Collegium Ramazzini, Bologna, ItalyDr. Bruce Lanphear, MD, MPH
Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, CanadaCharles Benbrook, PhD
Benbrook Consulting Services, Lakeville, MaineDr. Beate Ritz, MD, PhD, FSPH
University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CaliforniaAlexandra Muñoz, MS, PhD
Independent Toxicologist, Miami, FloridaAnne Riederer, PhD
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonJennifer Fung, PhD
University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, CaliforniaCatherine Hong
University of Washington, Seattle, WashingtonKarie L. Knoke
Benbrook Consulting Service, Sandpoint, IdahoDr. Dennis D. Weisenburger, MD
University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NebraskaAlexander A. Kaurov, PhD
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New ZealandKelly Ryerson, MBA
American Regeneration, Miami, FloridaYogi Hendlin, PhD
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The NetherlandsMelinda Hemmelgarn, MS, RD
Beyond Pesticides, Columbia, MissouriKendra Klein, PhD
Friends of the Earth, Washington D.C.Erik Millstone, PhD
Science Policy Research Unit, University of Sussex, England, United KingdomNoreen Mucha, MPA
Wisconsin Organics, Waukesha, WisconsinDr. Kambria Beck Holder, MD
Family Physician, Kilauea, HawaiiDr. Stephanie Blount, MD
Pediatrician, West Palm Beach, FloridaCarsten A. Brühl, PhD
Technical University Kaiserslautern – Landau, Institute for Environmental Sciences, Landau, GermanyDr. Ana M. Mora, MD, PhD
School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CaliforniaDr. Michael W. Schwartz, MD
#BigGovt #health #law #medicalScience #poison
Professor of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington