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Now glyphosate found in people's urine

According to an article in German in the Ithaca journal, a German university
study has found significant concentrations of glyphosate in the urine samples of
city dwellers. The analysis of the urine samples apparently found that all had
concentrations of glyphosate at 5 to 20-fold the limit for drinking water. As
well as being used increasingly widely in food production, glyphosate-based
weedkillers often also get sprayed onto railway lines, urban pavements and
roadsides.
http://www.ithaka-journal.net/herbizide-im-urin

Disturbingly, the Ithaca journal reports (in our translation), "The address of
the university labs, which did the research, the data and the evaluation of the
research method is known to the editors. Because of significant pressure by
agrochemical representatives and the fear that the work of the lab could be
influenced, the complete analytical data will only be published in the course of
this year."
http://www.ithaka-journal.net/herbizide-im-urin

News of this study comes not long after the publication of a study confirming
glyphosate was contaminating groundwater. Last year also saw the publication of
two US Geological Survey studies which consistently found glyphosate in streams,
rain and even air in agricultural areas of the US.
http://www.gmwatch.org/latest-listing/1-news-items/13549

Other recent studies - see the abstracts of the 4 below - indicate that people
may not only be absorbing glyphosate from multiple sources but that it can
circulate in the blood and can even cross the placental barrier and so reach the
developing fetus.
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Aris, A. and S. Leblanc (2011). "Maternal and fetal exposure to pesticides
associated to genetically modified foods in EasternTownships of Quebec, Canada."
ReproductiveToxicology 31(4).
    
Pesticides associated to genetically modified foods (PAGMF), are engineered to
tolerate herbicides such as glyphosate (GLYP) and gluphosinate (GLUF) or
insecticides such as the bacterial toxin bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). The aim of
this study was to evaluate the correlation between maternal and fetal exposure,
and to determine exposure levels of GLYPandits metabolite aminomethylphosphoricacid
(AMPA), GLUF and its metabolite 3-methylphosphinicopropionicacid (3-MPPA) and
Cry1Ab protein (a Bt toxin) in Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada. Blood of
thirty pregnant women (PW) and thirty-nine nonpregnant women (NPW)were studied.
Serum GLYPand GLUF were detected in NPW and not detected in PW. Serum 3-MPPA and
CryAb1toxin were detected in PW,their fetuses and NPW. This is the first study
to reveal the presence of circulating PAGMF in women with and without pregnancy,
paving the way for a new field in reproductive toxicology including nutrition
and utero-placental toxicities.
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Chang, F. C., M. F. Simcik, et al. (2011). "Occurrence and fate of the herbicide
glyphosate and its degradate aminomethylphosphonic acid in the atmosphere."
Environ Toxicol Chem 30(3): 548-555.
    
This is the first report on the ambient levels of glyphosate, the most widely
used herbicide in the United States, and its major degradation product,
aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA), in air and rain. Concurrent, weekly
integrated air particle and rain samples were collected during two growing
seasons in agricultural areas in Mississippi and Iowa. Rain was also collected
in Indiana in a preliminary phase of the study. The frequency of glyphosate
detection ranged from 60 to 100% in both air and rain. The concentrations of
glyphosate ranged from <0.01 to 9.1 ng/m(3) and from <0.1 to 2.5 microg/L in air
and rain samples, respectively. The frequency of detection and median and
maximum concentrations of glyphosate in air were similar or greater to those of
the other high-use herbicides observed in the Mississippi River basin, whereas
its concentration in rain was greater than the other herbicides. It is not known
what percentage of the applied glyphosate is introduced into the air, but
it
was estimated that up to 0.7% of application is removed from the air in
rainfall. Glyphosate is efficiently removed from the air; it is estimated that
an average of 97% of the glyphosate in the air is removed by a weekly rainfall
>/= 30 mm.
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Coupe, R. H., S. J. Kalkhoff, et al. (2011). "Fate and transport of glyphosate
and aminomethylphosphonic acid in surface waters of agricultural basins."
Pest Manag Sci.
    
BACKGROUND: Glyphosate [N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine] is a herbicide used widely
throughout the world in the production of many crops and is heavily used on
soybeans, corn and cotton. Glyphosate is used in almost all agricultural areas
of the United States, and the agricultural use of glyphosate has increased from
less than 10 000 Mg in 1992 to more than 80 000 Mg in 2007. The greatest
intensity of glyphosate use is in the midwestern United States, where
applications are predominantly to genetically modified corn and soybeans. In
spite of the increase in usage across the United States, the characterization of
the transport of glyphosate and its degradate aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA)
on a watershed scale is lacking. RESULTS: Glyphosate and AMPA were frequently
detected in the surface waters of four agricultural basins. The frequency and
magnitude of detections varied across basins, and the load, as a percentage of
use, ranged from 0.009 to 0.86% and could be related to three
general
characteristics: source strength, rainfall runoff and flow route. CONCLUSIONS:
Glyphosate use in a watershed results in some occurrence in surface water;
however, the watersheds most at risk for the offsite transport of glyphosate are
those with high application rates, rainfall that results in overland runoff and
a flow route that does not include transport through the soil. Copyright (c)
2011 Society of Chemical Industry.
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Poulsen, M. S., E. Rytting, et al. (2009). "Modeling placental transport:
Correlation of in vitro BeWo cell permeability and ex vivo human placental
perfusion."
Toxicol In Vitro 23: 1380-1386.
    
The placental passage of three compounds with different physicochemical
properties was recently investigated in ex vivo human placental perfusion
experiments (caffeine, benzoic acid, and glyphosate) [Mose, T., Kjaerstad, M.B.,
Mathiesen, L., Nielsen, J.B., Edelfors, S., Knudsen, L.E., 2008. Placental
passage of benzoic acid, caffeine, and glyphosate in an ex vivo human perfusion
system. J. Toxicol. Environ. Health, Part A 71, 984-991]. In this work, the
transport of these same three compounds, plus the reference compound antipyrine,
was investigated using BeWo (b30) cell monolayers. Transport across the BeWo
cells was observed in the rank order of caffeine>antipyrine>benzoic
acid>glyphosate in terms of both the apparent permeability coefficient and the
initial slope, defined as the linear rate of substance transferred to the fetal
compartment as percent per time, a parameter used to compare the two
experimental models. The results from the in vitro studies were in excellent
agreement
with the ex vivo results (caffeine approximately antipyrine>benzoic
acid>glyphosate). However the transfer rate was much slower in the BeWo cells
compared to the perfusion system. The advantages and limitations of each model
are discussed in order to assist in the preparation, prediction, and performance
of future studies of maternal-fetal transfer.

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Website: http://www.gmwatch.org




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