Lucky for consumers that USDA publishes residue quantities, because FDA and 
EPA would never annoy the chemical industry by releasing such info.  Anyhow, 
because of USDA we know that malathion residues and metabolites are more common 
on blueberries than any other food, according to the USDA report a couple of 
years back.  Pretty good reason to choose organic blueberries.   The other 
agencies love to study the health effects of chemicals one at a time, ignoring 
the interactions with other chemicals.  Beekeepers are beginning to understand 
the hollowness of those studies.  
--------------------------------------------
On Sat, 5/3/14, Jon Clements <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and chemicals
 To: "Apple-crop discussion list" <[email protected]>
 Date: Saturday, May 3, 2014, 9:32 PM
 
 To further add
 to the discussion: 
http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2014/04/europe-just-banned-apples-you-eat
 
 And, I find it interesting: Cancer Treatment Center of
 America advertisement before the video (is everyone seeing
 that?); and all the talk about browning and apple longevity
 in the video, anyone heard of Arctic Apples? (I am sure you
 have.)
 
 
 
 Also, I am tangentially involved with Eco Apples
 (http://redtomato.org/ecoapple.php)
 and this subject has already come up with them. So, yes,
 people (Whole Foods?) do watch and pay attention. Perception
 is reality.
 
 
 
 Lest anyone forget: the apple-crop discussion(s)
 are permanently archived here 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
 for anyone to see even though they are not subscribers. (If
 they find it.) I think it is a good thing to have the
 archive, just keep in mind it is there. I truly hope it does
 not inhibit discussion. I try to live by the motto "if
 I don't want the whole world to read it, better not put
 it in an e-mail."
 
 
 
 JC
 
 On Thu, May 1, 2014 at
 9:21 PM, Weinzierl, Richard A <[email protected]>
 wrote:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Amazing.
 
  
 First, I admit that
 I usually support new restrictions imposed by the US EPA in
 response to new tox data or standards because in general one
 can at least attribute
  the decisions to people who understand how to weigh
 scientific evidence … and I do not expect that they will
 always agree with me, to one direction or the other. I
 probably do not agree with industry opposition to the EPA as
 often as many on this list-serve
  might think I should, but that’s why we all should
 communicate.
  
 But …  wow …
 Apparently TYT (the young Turks) feel free to offer
 compelling opinions without any need to understand the issue
 in any substantive way.  One has
  to (NOT) love the web.  What a bunch of arrogant talking
 heads. Perhaps they should launch a vendetta on nitrosamines
 from BBQs as David R. brought up.  Or maybe even quit
 wearing any SYNTHETIC fabrics or burning any hydrocarbon
 fuels.  As others have posted
  … those who eat lots of fresh fruits and vegetables,
 produced conventionally or organically, are the healthiest
 of all in our societies. 
 
  
 I’ll probably
 regret posting this … but I do not understand how their
 opinions warrant anyone’s attention.  Not Faux News, but
 just as faux. 
 
  
 Ugh.  Let’s hope
 academic freedom is a real thing, or I’ll become a retired
 old new fruit grower a year or two before I planned to
 be.
 
  
 
 Rick
 Weinzierl
  
 Richard
 Weinzierl
 Professor and
 Extension Entomologist
 IL SARE PDP
 Coordinator
 Department of Crop
 Sciences, University of Illinois
 S-334 Turner Hall,
 1102 S. Goodwin Avenue
 Urbana, IL
 61801
 217-244-2126
 
  
 
 
 From: [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]
 On Behalf Of Stephen Jansky
 
 Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2014 6:59 PM
 
 To: [email protected]
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
  
 
 The YOUTUBE
 reaction to American Apples containing DHP....  Not good
 press for the U.S. Industry....
 
 
 
 
 http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=oEh1IbOKRBo
 
 
 
 Steve
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 
 To: [email protected]
 
 Date: Wed, 30 Apr 2014 10:11:27 +0000
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 Hello Mike and
 all,
 
  
 
 The backdrop to the
 Irish opinion was, I believe, that a number of EU countries
 were more reliant on DPA than some others, and that Ireland,
 having a small
  apple industry (but nonetheless one in which about 30% of
 the fruit could have been DPA treated), was naturally
 inclined to be positively disposed to its continued use
 (under considerable lobbying pressure from our own apple
 growers association, and from some
  other countries).
  
 
 I do know that
 strong efforts were made by the task force to fill the
 supposed data gaps, but in the end they did not win out. So
 in the end, as you say the
  MRL was dropped not based on a definitive assessment of
 risk, but because, as I mentioned, there is a general policy
 thrust to remove nitrosamines from diet.
 
  
 
 Dave is correct to
 point out that there are uncontrollable sources of
 nitrosamines in diet, but thank goodness they have not begun
 regulating how people cook
  their foods at home yet. It would be interesting to compare
 the amount of nitrosamine in a typical diet due to BBQ’s,
 compared with that which might come from DPA treated
 apples.
 
  
 
 1-MCP is not a
 replacement for DPA, and a few years ago I had done some
 small-scale trials on using about 10% rates of DPA both
 without and in combination with
  1-MCP, and found scald control to be very good in both
 cases, indicating that recommended DPA rates were probably
 too high to begin with. I think such combinations would have
 been the ideal solution, had DPA not been removed from the
 market, as CO2 injury
  is a serious risk with 1-MCP use, which is why we now must
 use higher-tech storage systems. Regarding the treatments
 with DPA at 10% of the recommended rate, residues were still
 detectable at about 0.1 to 0.05 ppm after 6 months of
 storage (unwashed apples).
  Even if we could guarantee the lower figure, because DPA
 has now been withdrawn, any residue found in a random test
 would be an issue, as use of an unapproved chemical is
 illegal (even if it leaves no residue).
 
  
 
 We have not got as
 far as Mosbah’s idea of calling pesticides plant
 medicines, though the industry does use the phrase plant
 protectant products, even though
  the public still call them pesticides. It will take quite
 some time to change that, but the opportunity arises each
 time someone asks the question.
 
  
 
 Finally, regarding
 Jean-Marc’s observation of reduced aroma, we have been
 able to offset this in some varieties (for example Elstar
 & clones, Pinova and Wellant)
  by a delayed harvest, which is in itself facilitated by the
 excellent ability of 1-MCP to stop these particular
 varieties ripening further. In this case we end up with
 firmer fresher-tasting apples which also have great aroma
 characteristics. For other varieties
  (e.g. Jonagold and clones), once ripening is under way the
 effect of 1-MCP is not so marked, so later harvest is not
 the solution.
 
  
 
 I would add that the
 advent of 1-MCP has changed my planting strategy from
 Jonagold type apples to Elstar type apples.
 
  
 
 
 Con
 
 
  
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]
 On Behalf Of Mike Willett
 
 Sent: 30 April 2014 06:36
 
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
  
 
 As you can imagine, we
 have been following this issue very closely for a number of
 years.  According to the U.S. EPA's Registration
 Eligibility Decision for
  DPA, diphenyl nitrosamine is a trace contaminant in
 technical DPA.  In the most recent risk assessment (2012)
 done in the EU for DPA, by Ireland's Pesticide
 Registration & Control Division as the rapporteur member
 state (RMS), it came to this conclusion:
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 "N-nitrosodiphenylamine
 is found at trace levels, below the LOQ in processed apple
 samples. When you consider the toxicological profile of this
 nitrosamine and the amounts at which it is likely
  to be consumed, the RMS calculations show that there are no
 safety concerns. One must also consider that diphenylamine
 is not applied to apples destined for the processing market,
 it is only applied to freshly consumed table apples, as
 appearance of these
  apples is very important. 
 
  
 
 
 Therefore, the RMS
 remains supportive of the approval of
 diphenylamine."
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 In the study that
 generated the opinion above which was done to address home
 processing of apples that were originally sold for fresh
 consumption, no nitrosamines
  were found in raw apples, nor in apple juice; only in
 blended and chopped apples ("processed"
 apples).
 
 
  
 
 
 The decision announced
 in March of this year indicates that the reason the MRL for
 DPA was reduced to 0.1 ppm was because of data gaps in the
 registration
  package that had been submitted.  The EU DPA Task Force
 has vigorously protested the allegation of data gaps but, at
 any rate, the reduction in the MRL in the EU was not based
 on a definitive assessment of risk.
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 While I am not an
 expert in this area, given the discussion regarding
 1-MCP, while it is very effective at preventing scald, work
 done by Jim Mattheis at
  USDA/ARS-Wenatchee and Chris Watkins at Cornell, notes that
 in certain situations use of 1-MCP can increase certain
 fruit disorders, some related to CO2
 injury.  Many packers in the U.S. Pacific Northwest,
 now use lower rates of DPA in combination with 1-MCP to
 maximize its benefits.
 
 
 
     
 
 
 
 
 Mike
 Willett
 
 Northwest
 Horticultural Council
 
 www.nwhort.org
 
 
 [email protected]
 
 
 509.969.0245 mobile
 
 
  
 
 This
 message is from a remote location, sometimes truly
 remote.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 [[email protected]]
 on behalf of David A. Rosenberger [[email protected]]
 
 
 Sent: Tuesday, April 29, 2014 10:46 AM
 
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
 Hello, Con —
 
 
 Since grilling meat on a barbecue
 almost always creates some nitrosamines, I’m assuming that
 outdoor barbecues have also been banned in Europe?
 :)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ****************************************************************
 
 Dave Rosenberger, Professor Emeritus
 
 
 Dept. of Plant
 Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology
 
 
 Cornell’s Hudson
 Valley Lab, P.O. Box 727, Highland, NY 12528
 
      
  Office:  845-691-7231    Cell: 
    845-594-3060
 
 
          http://blogs.cornell.edu/plantpathhvl/ 
 
 
 
 ****************************************************************
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 On Apr 29, 2014, at 12:00 PM, Con.Traas
 <[email protected]>
 wrote:
 
 
  
 
 
 Hello
 Mosbah,
 
 The cost
 of smartfresh treatment here is about 10 euros (12 dollars?)
 per 330kg bin (700lbs approx.). It feels expensive,
 especially compared with DPA, which is very cheap.
  It does a lot more though.
 
 By the
 way, I think the issue with DPA from a European perspective
 is that when it degrades it forms one or more nitrosamines,
 which are a group of chemicals many of which are
  carcinogenic, though some much more-so than others. So the
 EU is seeking to eliminate all sources of nitrosamines from
 diets, and therefore DPA is gone.
 
 
 I do
 remember when DPA was "cleaned-up", but its
 breakdown products will be nitrosamines, regardless of how
 cleanly it is produced.
 
 
  
 
 
 Con
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 [[email protected]]
 on behalf of Kushad, Mosbah M
  [[email protected]]
 
 Sent: 28 April 2014 15:53
 
 To: Apple-crop discussion list
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
 
 If you are asking
 about diphenylamine (DPA), then it is an antioxidants that
 blocks the oxidation of alpha farnesene into conjugated
 trienes in the peel. Conjugated
  trienes are what causes the apple/pear peel to turn brown
 from regular or superficial scald.  It doesn’t help soft
 scald or sunscald.   In the old days they used to wrap
 fruits in paper soaked in mineral oil that absorbs the
 conjugated triene gas.  I have
  only scene this recently being practiced in one place.  To
 minimize superficial scald development, harvest fruits when
 they are horticulturally mature.  Ethoxyquin was removed
 from the market around the 80’s  because it was suspected
 to cause cancer. However,
  DPA went through a rigorous cleaning process to remove any
 impurities that cause cancer.  If you are asking about
 1-methylecyclopropene (1-MCP), also known as SmartFresh, it
 is an ethylene action inhibitor. Treated fruits produce
 ethylene but it does not work,
  because the sites where ethylene normally attaches itself,
 to initiate fruit ripening, are occupied by 1-MCP.  There
 is no evidence that  1-MCP causes any harm to human. 
   Some consider 1-MCP as the best thing since CA storage
 was introduced in the 30’s -40’s. 
   hope this helps, Mosbah Kushad, university of Illinois. 
 
 
  
 
 Question to Con.
 What is the cost of using SmartFresh per bushel in your
 operation?
 
 
  
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]
 On Behalf Of Ginda Fisher
 
 Sent: Monday, April 28, 2014 7:08 AM
 
 To: Apple-crop discussion list; Con.Traas; 'Evan
 B. Milburn'; 'Apple-crop discussion list'
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
 
  
 
 Can anyone summarize what this chemical
 is, why and how it is used, and what the risks might be to
 farmers and consumers from its use? I feel like I walked
 into the middle of
  a conversation.
 
 
 
 Thanks,
 
 -- 
 
 Typed with Swype. Who knows what I meant to say?
 
 On April 28, 2014 4:03:51 AM EDT,
 "Con.Traas" <[email protected]>
 wrote:
 
 Hello Evan and
 everybody,
 
 
  
 
 Coming from my
 perspective, where we are now having to cope without DPA for
 storing Bramley (culinary) apples, I must say that is it
 proving tricky, but we
  are managing, through use of 1-MCP combined with more
 complex (and expensive and risky) storage regimes. So I
 would say it is technically possible to keep apples without
 DPA or ethoxyquin, which we also can’t use, but ironically
 it mitigates against the smaller
  grower, and in favour of the larger ones (big ag?) who can
 afford the higher tech gear.
 
  
 
 It is ironic that
 scaring people about pesticide residues on fresh foods
 (especially fruits) actually causes people to eat more
 processed foods (as though their
  ingredients do not also get pesticide treatments), as the
 studies linking better health with fruit consumption are
 studies conducted with conventionally grown fruits with
 their pesticide residues (if they are not residue free). In
 other words, the benefits
  of eating fruits and vegetables are there in black and
 white, even if those fruits and vegetables have residues. It
 is far less healthy to switch to a candy bar from an apple,
 even if that apple has some residue (so long as that is
 below permitted levels).
  However, this is not a message we can send out, so we are
 left grappling when emails like this from EWG are
 circulated.
 
 
  
 
 The joke of what EWG
 seems to be doing is producing a dirty dozen or clean
 fifteen list is that those lists say nothing at all about
 the risk of a pesticide
  residue on the particular apple in your fruit-bowl. You
 could be eating a residue-free fruit from among the “dirty
 dozen”, or one covered in pesticide from among the
 “clean fifteen”.
 
 
  
 
 Despite the
 differences in regulations between Europe and the US (and I
 favour in general the less permissive, more cautious
 European standards, despite having
  to work within their restrictions), our agriculture here is
 constantly increasing in scale, and resembles more and more
 what would be our stereotyped image of US industrial
 agriculture. That is because the regulations have more in
 common than what separates
  them, and farming is becoming more and more like a
 business, and less like a passion.
 
  
 
 I am personally not
 a fan of industrial agriculture, although I employ mostly
 similar methods. However, motivation is a key factor, and
 for me, the motivation
  is not profit maximisation. For the industrial model is
 about profit before all else, and that is not a suitable way
 for the World to produce its food.
 
 
  
 
 However, as long as
 Joe public takes the attitude that 7% of their disposable
 income is what they will spend on food (that is the Irish
 %), then agriculture
  will continue to become more industrial, as for me that is
 not a percentage that can support the production of produce
 and foods that consumers might feel more comfortable buying,
 and might be able to have more confidence in.
 
 
  
 
 So, instead of
 sending 45 bucks to Ken Cook, I would suggest that Joe
 public either sends it to a principled (and hopefully
 small-scale) farmer someplace near
  them, or better still, buys a few fruit trees or invests in
 a few packets of seeds, and grows their own pesticide-free
 produce.
 
 
  
 
 
 Con
 Traas
 
 European (Irish)
 Apple Grower
 
 T:
 @theapplefarmer
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 From:
 [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]
 On Behalf Of Evan B. Milburn
 
 Sent: 28 April 2014 02:32
 
 To: Apple-Crop
 
 Subject: Re: [apple-crop] apples and
 chemicals
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
   This was sent to me
 from a friend of mine by the name of George.
  It was send to him from one of his co-workers.
 
 
 
                                               
 Evan Milburn
 
 
 
                                        
 www.milburnorchards.com  
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Hey
 Evan what’s this all about?
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________ apple-crop
 mailing list 
 [email protected] 
 http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop
 
 
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 
 apple-crop mailing list
 
 [email protected]
 
 http://virtualorchard.net/mailman/listinfo/apple-crop
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 Jon Clements
 aka 'Mr Honeycrisp'
 UMass Cold Spring Orchard
 393 Sabin St.
 Belchertown, MA  01007
 413-478-7219
 umassfruit.com
 
 
 
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