Gardening
Related: About this forumGMOs in our ornamentals?
I hope it's okay if I drop in your group, but I've been noticing something different in my plants, particularly annuals lately. It seems there are fewer bugs and butterflies. I used to have lots of lady bugs but haven't seen one lately, very few butterflies and wasps as well as bees. Since I don't use pesticides, chemical fertilizers or herbicides, I started wondering why. Maybe it's the drought we are going through, but OTOH I still have ants and snails.
However when I put out hanging baskets of flowers for hummingbirds of flowers they like, they haven't gone to them but to flowering bushes I planted years ago. I buy seedlings at the nursery to plant. Has Monsanto started interfering with our garden plants too? Has anyone else noticed this?
The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,983 posts)what you do need to watch out for is neonicotinoids, a type of pesticide many nurseries have been using in greenhouses. Neonicotinoids have been used recently in commercial agriculture and nurseries because they kill insects without being toxic to humans, birds or mammals. The problem is that these chemicals are systemic. They are applied to seeds and seedlings, and end up distributed throughout the whole plant. Then, if bugs eat the plant, they die. The problem is that these chemicals also kill the bees that eat the plants' nectar, and this is getting to be a huge problem. Some nurseries have lately started advertising that their plants are neonic-free, and you should buy only from those nurseries and garden centers. If you get plants from a big-box store, however, you probably can't be sure those plants are safe. More info here: http://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/neonicotinoid-insecticides-zmgz14fmzsto.aspx#axzz3BFiruBaR
There could be a lot of reasons why the hummingbirds aren't coming to the hanging flowers, but GMOs are not a likely culprit. GMO plants are being developed mainly for crops, not ornamentals.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)I believe I will start checking out the wholesalers. They do put their labels on the packs. It shouldn't be hard to track down.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,513 posts)Worth a read - I've just skimmed it, but it is a good question.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)to expand it. Seems this would be a good opportunity to start a seed bank of non-GMO polluted ornamental plants for the future.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,513 posts)Cleita
(75,480 posts)The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,983 posts)The concern with using them for crops is not so much that they are dangerous to eat (that hasn't been conclusively established one way or the other yet) but that there are some other unintended consequences. For example, there is a kind of GMO corn called "Roundup-Ready." It has been developed to be resistant to glyphosate (Roundup) which kills any kind of plant. Glyphosate is less toxic than some other herbicides, so if you are going to use any herbicide at all, it's better than the others. But there's no way to apply it to a field to kill the weeds without also killing your crop, which is why they developed "Roundup-Ready" seeds. Then glyphosate can be used to kill the weeds without endangering the crop. However, nature always bats last, and because of the widespread use of glyphosate some weeds have managed to become resistant to it. The worst of these is called Palmer amaranth, which is a very nasty weed that is almost unkillable, and it's begun infesting a lot of fields in the south and moving north. It chokes out everything. The result is that even if you have planted GMO corn that's resistant to glyphosate, the glyphosate-resistant weeds will kill your crop anyhow. It's Mutual Assured Destruction with plants, again proving the point that it's not nice to fool Mother Nature.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)the critters that benefit from them, it would seem to me, and eventually that might be us.
The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,983 posts)not pesticides, which is a different issue. I think the neonicotinoids, which are not related to GMOs, are a more direct threat to beneficial insects at this point, and I'm glad to see that there more awareness of this problem.
Cleita
(75,480 posts)and don't biodegrade as readily like claimed. All that stuff is bad IMHO. To me old fashioned weed pulling is therapeutic. My methods are deterrents, like wire baskets to keep the gophers from eating the roots of new plants or sometimes over planting in the hopes some will survive. I also try to achieve a balance in companion planting to attract a wide variety bugs, birds and other critters so that most of my plants survive with minimal damage.
That's why this has been so mystifying to me. Sure the plants look better, however, you should see what snails did to my delphiniums. It seems the critters and birds that kept them under control are not coming around like before.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)Drop in more often. That is an excellent question, and your observation about the annuals you have is astute. I haven't paid enough attention, although I don't do many annuals. I will be more careful in the future as well.