Linked to reproductive concerns, chlormequat is not approved for use on U.S. crops—however, it is entering our food supply through imports.
A new study just came out showing that a pesticide linked to infertility was found in upwards of 80 percent of people in America.
One of Canada’s top marine biologists is comparing the harm wrought by the accumulation of plastics in the world’s oceans to the warnings about the pesticide DDT in the famous 1962 book “Silent Spring.”
Linked to reproductive concerns, chlormequat is not approved for use on U.S. crops—however, it is entering our food supply through imports.
A new study just came out showing that a pesticide linked to infertility was found in upwards of 80 percent of people in America.
One of Canada’s top marine biologists is comparing the harm wrought by the accumulation of plastics in the world’s oceans to the warnings about the pesticide DDT in the famous 1962 book “Silent Spring.”