04/23/2024
Happy Earth Day from your favorite Facebook tree hugger. Those who know me well know that I love birds, pollinators, and have a general love for nature and wildlife. I try to do my best for them every day. The American Bird Conservancy (link in the comments) has an entire page of how you can help in your day to day life that will help birds, pollinators and wildlife. The main ones are:
1. Stop using lawn care services and using pesticides, insecticides, and neonicotinoids. These products kill birds and the insects they eat. They have also been linked to cancer in your animals who run and play in the grass in your backyard.
2. Stop using rat poisons/rodenticides to get rid of moles, gophers and mice in your yard and house. Poisons like d-CON cause fatal hemorrhaging in eagles, hawks, owls, and other wildlife. In fact, these poisons are killing off the very predators that help us keep rats and mice in check. They also harm dogs, cats and children.
3. W**d Killers. They kill more than weeds! Common chemicals used to control weeds in home gardens and on lawns, such as 2, 4-D and glyphosate (used in Round-Up) are now known to be toxic to wildlife and aquatic organisms. Glyphosate was found in 2015 to be a probable human carcinogen. In addition, the surfactant chemicals (transport agents) added to formulations of these herbicides can also be toxic.
4. Get the Lead out! In addition to pesticides, toxics like the heavy metal lead (Pb) continue to be a widespread threat. An estimated 16 million birds are poisoned by lead every year. Some birds, like Bald Eagles, accidentally ingest lead shotgun pellets and ammunition fragments when scavenging on carcasses or remains left by hunters.
Other birds such as Mourning Doves mistake spent shot for seed in fields and forests, while birds like Common Loons and Trumpeter Swans swallow lead fishing tackle while foraging on lake bottoms.
Non-lead options, such as copper, tin, and tungsten, are readily available; the more these products are used, the more affordable and widely accepted they will become.
And last, but not least, grow a pollinator garden! There is so much information on the internet how to do this. I've done it on my small apartment deck. Anyone can do it!
OK....my Earth Day rant is over!