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68% pesticides used as wood preservatives in Maryland, US

China Agriculture Report By CnAgriChina Agriculture Report Print
Keywords:pesticides used wood
The US Maryland Department of Agriculture (MDA), which is responsible for enforcing the Maryland Pesticide Applicator’s Law, has released the results of a statewide pesticide use survey – the first such report since 2004. The report covers usage in 2011 but was conducted in 2012 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS).

According to the survey, more than 16.5 million pounds of pesticides were used throughout Maryland in 2011. The majority – more than 11.2 million pounds or 68 percent of the total – were pesticides used as wood preservatives. Wood preservative are pesticides commonly used to protect decks, raised garden beds, telephone poles, road signs, marine pilings, etc. from the damage insects and mold can inflict. Wood preservatives are applied to wood in a controlled factory environment prior to its sale to contractors.

Herbicides accounted for 3.4 million pounds or 21 percent of total usage; insecticides accounted for 5 percent; and fungicides for 3 percent. Since the last pesticide survey was conducted in 2004, fungicide use has declined 84 percent; herbicide usage has declined 46 percent; and insecticide use declined 5 percent.

More than 360 pesticide products are listed and ranked in the report. It also compares the top ten pesticide types (i.e., insecticides, herbicides and fungicides) used in 2011 and compares them to usage amounts from 2004, 2000, 1997, and 1994. Because of budget restrictions in recent years, this is the first Pesticide Use Survey that MDA has been able to commission NASS to conduct since 2004.

The survey, which was voluntary, included farmers, private applicators, commercially licensed businesses and public agencies that are permitted by MDA to apply pesticides. The overall response rate was 51 percent, which is considered an excellent response for a survey conducted solely by mail. There were no telephone or in-person follow ups.

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