Search
Better Farming OntarioBetter PorkBetter Farming Prairies

Better Farming Ontario Featured Articles

Better Farming Ontario magazine is published 11 times per year. After each edition is published, we share featured articles online.


Company promotes lubricant as a way to reduce neonicotinoid threat to bees

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

by SUSAN MANN

Bayer CropScience has developed a lubricant that will give corn and soybean farmers a new option for reducing dust from neonicotinoid treated seeds.

The new lubricant, made of polyethylene wax, can be used instead of traditional lubricants, such as talc or graphite, and will be available for the 2014 planting season on corn and soybeans in Canada.

Lubricants are recommended by planter equipment manufacturers to help reduce friction and improve planting uniformity. But dust emissions from planting seeds treated with neonicotinoid, an insecticide, “could have potential acute effects on honeybees,” according to a press release on Bayer’s United States website.

Bayer marketing communications spokesperson Derrick Rozdeba says by email some lubricants can result in increased airborne dust particles released from the planting equipment that “could potentially expose foraging honeybees to small traces of seed treatment products if they come into contact with the dust.”

The new lubricant was shown to significantly decrease dust and emissions during laboratory testing, the release says. There was a 90 per cent reduction in total dust using the lubricant versus talc and a 60 per cent reduction versus graphite.

This spring, Bayer tested its product in the field throughout the United States and in Ontario and Quebec in collaboration with major planter equipment manufacturers. Fifty-six growers provided feedback from the trials representing more than 40,000 corn acres. In Ontario, 18 farmers participated in the trial representing 13,000 corn acres, Rozdeba says.

Most growers said the polyethylene wax lubricant was better or equal to the talc or graphite they were currently using, the release says.

Rozdeba says Bayer developed the new lubricant as part of its ongoing commitment to stewardship. Two years ago, it began to investigate alternative lubricants that could reduce the potential of dust emissions. Favourable laboratory testing prompted this year’s field trials “to ensure the new technology would be commercially viable.”

Dan Davidson, president of the Ontario Beekeepers’ Association, couldn’t be reached for comment.

In an April 2013 position statement, the association called on the federal government to suspend all conditional registrations of neonicotinoid products until it’s determined how best to protect all pollinator insects, including honeybees, from the pesticide. It has also asked for independent research into the environmental and ecological impact of the pesticide.

In September, Health Canada’s regulatory pest management agency called for the introduction of a number of measures to protect pollinators from the insecticide, including dust-reducing seed flow lubricants.  BF

Current Issue

June/July 2025

Better Farming Magazine

Farms.com Breaking News

Calf Auction Raises Funds for Youth

Monday, June 30, 2025

Wyatt Westman-Frijters from Milverton won a heifer calf named Ingrid through a World Milk Day promotion by Maplevue Farms and a local Perth, Ontario radio station. Instead of keeping the calf, 22-year-old Westman-Frijters chose to give back to the community. The calf was sent to the... Read this article online

Cattle Stress Tool May Boost Fertility

Friday, June 27, 2025

Kansas State University researchers have developed a cool tool that may help reduce cattle stress and improve artificial insemination (AI) results. The idea came from animal science experts Nicholas Wege Dias and Sandy Johnson, who observed that cattle accustomed to their environment... Read this article online

Ontario pasture lands get $5M boost

Friday, June 27, 2025

The governments of Canada and Ontario are investing up to $5 million to strengthen shared community grazing pastures. This funding supports the province’s plan to protect Ontario’s agriculture sector and help cattle farmers improve pasture quality, ensuring long-term sustainability and... Read this article online

Health Canada sets rules for drone spraying

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Health Canada has approved the use of drones, also called Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS), for pesticide application under the Pest Control Products Act (PCPA). Drones are considered aircraft by Transport Canada, but Health Canada treats them differently due to their unique... Read this article online

BF logo

It's farming. And it's better.

 

a Farms.com Company

Subscriptions

Subscriber inquiries, change of address, or USA and international orders, please email: subscriptions@betterfarming.com or call 888-248-4893 x 281.


Article Ideas & Media Releases

Have a story idea or media release? If you want coverage of an ag issue, trend, or company news, please email us.

Follow us on Social Media

 

Sign up to a Farms.com Newsletter

 

DisclaimerPrivacy Policy2025 ©AgMedia Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Back To Top