On our side, a vast arsenal of chemical pesticides. On their side? They don't have a side, the pests who must do nature's bidding. This is our war, and should we win it, ours would be a sorry planet. With disturbing news from the front, Nature Wars sounds the alarm against our dangerous tactics for controlling the pests that are an annoying but integral part of our world.
Thirty years after Silent Spring woke us to the devastation wrought by DDT, chemical pesticides are as pervasive as ever, deployed at a rate of 4 pounds a year for every man, woman, and child in this country. This ongoing commitment to pesticides, Mark Winston argues, reflects our sense of place in nature: embattled, beleaguered, driven to aggression. His book, as sensible as it is wise, seeks to change this mindset, to show how a more measured and discriminating approach to pests, one based on management rather than eradication, might serve us and the natural world far better than our ill-fated all-out war.
Winston backs up this approach with a full battery of case studies that take us from lawns and kitchens to farms and orchards, from insects and weeds to rats and coyotes. Here we see the complex political, biological, economic, social, and personal interactions that lie behind each pest management decision. Against this background Winston considers diverse instances of past pest management that reveal a consistent pattern of mistakes and problems--and lead to realistic, workable proposals for reducing pesticide use.
A compelling book about ethics and choices, Nature Wars shows us the difference between protecting ourselves from real pests and poisoning ourselves and the planet. It turns us from our war on nature to our task as stewards of the environment.
On our side, a vast arsenal of chemical pesticides. On their side? They don't have a side, the pests who must do nature's bidding. This is our war, and should we win it, ours would be a sorry planet. With disturbing news from the front, Nature Wars sounds the alarm against our dangerous tactics for controlling the pests that are an annoying but integral part of our world.
Thirty years after Silent Spring woke us to the devastation wrought by DDT, chemical pesticides are as pervasive as ever, deployed at a rate of 4 pounds a year for every man, woman, and child in this country. This ongoing commitment to pesticides, Mark Winston argues, reflects our sense of place in nature: embattled, beleaguered, driven to aggression. His book, as sensible as it is wise, seeks to change this mindset, to show how a more measured and discriminating approach to pests, one based on management rather than eradication, might serve us and the natural world far better than our ill-fated all-out war.
Winston backs up this approach with a full battery of case studies that take us from lawns and kitchens to farms and orchards, from insects and weeds to rats and coyotes. Here we see the complex political, biological, economic, social, and personal interactions that lie behind each pest management decision. Against this background Winston considers diverse instances of past pest management that reveal a consistent pattern of mistakes and problems--and lead to realistic, workable proposals for reducing pesticide use.
A compelling book about ethics and choices, Nature Wars shows us the difference between protecting ourselves from real pests and poisoning ourselves and the planet. It turns us from our war on nature to our task as stewards of the environment.
Mark L. Winston is Professor and Senior Fellow at Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Dialogue and Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences.
Humans continue to deploy weapons of mass destruction against other
creatures of this planet, namely the insects and bugs that consume
our crops. No matter what we do, we seem unable to eradicate them,
and there are now those who believe that this fifty-year onslaught
is beginning to rebound on us. Mark Winston, author of Nature Wars,
is one of them. His book is…interesting…a good historical approach
to the subject…[and] makes fascinating and well-balanced
reading.
*Times Literary Supplement*
A highly readable history of pest control, from chemical sprays to
genetically altered plants.
*Chicago Tribune*
Nature Wars is an effective primer for the general reader on our
struggles against insects and other pests… In an articulate and
accessible writing style, Winston explains the pesticide dilemma,
the threat that our reliance on synthetic pesticides poses both to
human health and safety and to the preservation of what is left of
the natural environment… Winston’s discussion of these
controversial issues, and the conflict between humans and pests,
will be helpful to anyone who hopes to develop an informed opinion
about our continuing war with nature.
*Nature*
Winston…brings an unusually reasonable and compassionate voice to a
debate usually swarming with harangues… Winston understands the
impulse [to turn to powerful chemicals to control pests], but he
also understands that the consequences can be harmful and
surprising… Nature Wars leaves room for hope by setting an example
of reasonableness… He cuts through hysteria, spotlighting the real
threats of genetically engineered plants…[and] recommends tolerance
toward the roach… If people would only listen to voices like
Winston’s, our world would be safer for organisms in their natural
places—and even for pests like us.
*Discover*
In this well-written, up-to-date account of the history of
pest-control technology, Mark Winston describes how successful
alternative methods can be… If we are to realise the goal of
controlling pests without poisoning ourselves or the wildlife
around us, we need to match their evolutionary adaptability with
ingenuity in a diversity of control measures.
*BBC Wildlife*
With a gift for turning the arcane into amusing prose, Winston
explains how natural pheromones, sterilization strategies, and
insect predators are better alternatives for pest control.
*Science News*
Winston is probing and thoughtful, whether he is exploring what he
contends was an unwarranted public outcry over a 1992 spraying in
Vancouver of the biological control Bacillus thuringiensis to
thwart a gypsy-moth invasion, or the likelihood that the public
will view as a failure the ongoing effort in the Okanagan Valley of
British Columbia to stop the spread of codling moths (an apple
pest) by releasing sterile male moths.
*Boston Globe*
[An] erudite and fascinating book… Before telling some very good
tales about multiplying moths, gnawing rates and invading coyotes,
Winston sets down a few key economic facts… [And] the lesson here,
says Winston, reads like a Greek tragedy: The more modern
agriculture removes biodiversity from the land, the more
susceptible it becomes to pests, which ultimately means more
pesticides. This deadly cycle explains why the promise of
biological controls of the use of natural predators has remained
just that, a promise.
*Globe and Mail*
Mark Winston’s study of pest-control regimes and his conclusion
that we should go easier on pests…is a compelling argument and
certainly lively.
*The Independent*
If the dangers are well known and legislators are prepared to
regulate the release of chemicals into the environment, is there
still a problem? Mark Winston, in his book Nature Wars, firmly
believes there is… I recommend it to all those concerned with green
issues, be they scientist, student or layman.
*Times Higher Education Supplement*
Winston makes a strong case for pest management versus our
ill-fated attempts at pest eradication. He supports his approach
with a battery of case histories illustrating the complex
political, biological, economic, social and personal interactions
that lie behind each pest management decision… Winston also
discusses the problems arising from the evolution of
pesticide-resistant populations of target pests, the impact of
control measures on non-target organisms, the tendency of consumers
to overreact to the sight of a single cockroach or a blemished
fruit, and the attitude that we have a divine right to manipulate
nature to shape a world of human design.
*American Biology Teacher*
Mark Winston is that rare person: an entomologist (studier of
insects) who, to judge from Nature Wars, would make a charming and
entertaining dinner party guest. In Nature Wars, short listed for
last year’s BP Natural World book award, he shows how dependence on
chemical pesticides, and unrealistic consumer standards for
bug-free houses and gardens, have contributed to massive over-use
of dangerous chemicals.
*Earth Matters [UK]*
Mark Winston’s Nature Wars provides a useful, sane, and easily
accessible discussion about one of the most durable of
environmental problems: pest control… Nature Wars provides a very
useful summary of the biological complexities of pesticides and
their alternatives.
*Environmental Ethics*
In his book Nature Wars, Mark Winston, a full Professor of
Biological Sciences at Simon Fraser University, has managed to make
the topic of pest management fascinating even to those not working
in the field. It is well researched, probing, and accessible…
Winston hits all the relevant scientific points and his folksy
style presents them in language that anyone can understand.
*ESC (Entomological Society of Canada) Bulletin*
In Nature Wars Professor Winston brilliantly strips away the media
hype to unveil issues of significance such as the indiscriminate
and wanton destruction of thousands of insects and arthropod
species, seemingly for our benefit. With his background in
biological sciences, he builds up a strong case as to why we need
to protect these creatures for our own sake.
*European Business Report*
Mark Winston is writing about a population that has lost its
perception of itself as a species amongst other species, enjoys
horror movies about giant insects, killer bees or human-insect
transformations and can no longer see itself as part of a global
life-cycle. He offers some thoughtful and moderate views on the way
forward… It is a most readable book, a work of real scholarship and
provides insights into social history and the phenomena of public
opinion as well as the fascinating survey of pest-management.
*Resurgence [UK]*
[Nature Wars] is an extremely coherent and concise statement of
progressive thinking on how to manage agricultural pests…it
positively exudes good sense and rationality. I strongly recommend
it to anyone who has thought twice about biting into a shiny apple
on a supermarket shelf… Winston has thought hard about pest
management, and believes passionately that it can be improved. This
is an excellent book and should be very widely read.
*Tree [UK]*
Winston here enlightens those who bewail the massive use of
chemical insecticides outdoors—and indoors reach for bug spray at
first sight of a creepy crawly. Writing for a general, not
technical, reader, Winston descants on campaigns against rats and
roaches, then discusses the main strategies for ‘naturally’
controlling agricultural pests… A balanced overview.
*Booklist*
Winston manages to shape the art and science of pest management
into a fascinating subject. Pests eat our homes and crops and
clothes, they transmit disease, they plague our skin, hair, and
digestive tracts… And, Winston asserts, ‘it is time to reconsider
the terms of engagement.’ Why? Because chemicals attack a pest’s
nervous system, which (unfortunately) resembles our own rather
closely. The consequences: the author cites one million cases,
worldwide, of human pesticide poisoning annually (and 20,000
fatalities among those). Moreover, pest resistance to chemicals is
growing even as the chemicals continue to decimate natural predator
populations essential to the earth’s balance. Winston suggests
various remedies for our faulty attitudes and strategies… Like a
new Rachel Carson for the new millennium, Winston delivers a
nontoxic dose of much-needed common sense.
*Kirkus Reviews*
It has been over 30 years since Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring
sounded the alarm about the dangers of chemical pesticides. Now
Winston is issuing another wake-up call by showing how our battle
against pests has become a war on nature. Winston provides case
studies demonstrating alternative methods of pest control,
explaining how political, social, economic, and biologic
interactions behind pest-management decisions have contributed to
our failure to replace toxic chemicals as our first method of
choice. The author argues that we need to change our philosophy
from eradication to control because we will not win the war.
Winston has written a convincing and necessary book. Highly
recommended for academic and public libraries.
*Library Journal*
Before you reach for the can of Raid, reach for this book. Mark
Winston explains why our hopes of total victory in the war against
pests are as mistaken as they are futile, and he provides a
measured dose of common sense that should prevent many a hasty
attack.
*Bill McKibben, author of Hope, Human and Wild: True Stories of
Living Lightly on the Earth*
Humans continue to deploy weapons of mass destruction against other
creatures of this planet, namely the insects and bugs that consume
our crops. No matter what we do, we seem unable to eradicate them,
and there are now those who believe that this fifty-year onslaught
is beginning to rebound on us. Mark Winston, author of
Nature Wars, is one of them. His book is...interesting...a
good historical approach to the subject...[and] makes fascinating
and well-balanced reading. -- John Emsley * Times Literary
Supplement *
A highly readable history of pest control, from chemical sprays to
genetically altered plants. * Chicago Tribune *
Nature Wars is an effective primer for the general reader on
our struggles against insects and other pests... In an articulate
and accessible writing style, Winston explains the pesticide
dilemma, the threat that our reliance on synthetic pesticides poses
both to human health and safety and to the preservation of what is
left of the natural environment... Winston's discussion of these
controversial issues, and the conflict between humans and pests,
will be helpful to anyone who hopes to develop an informed opinion
about our continuing war with nature. -- Lawrence M. Hanks * Nature
*
Winston...brings an unusually reasonable and compassionate
voice to a debate usually swarming with harangues... Winston
understands the impulse [to turn to powerful chemicals to control
pests], but he also understands that the consequences can be
harmful and surprising... Nature Wars leaves room for hope
by setting an example of reasonableness... He cuts through
hysteria, spotlighting the real threats of genetically engineered
plants...[and] recommends tolerance toward the roach... If people
would only listen to voices like Winston's, our world would be
safer for organisms in their natural places-and even for pests like
us. -- Polly Shulman * Discover *
In this well-written, up-to-date account of the history of
pest-control technology, Mark Winston describes how
successful alternative methods can be... If we are to realise the
goal of controlling pests without poisoning ourselves or the
wildlife around us, we need to match their evolutionary
adaptability with ingenuity in a diversity of control measures. --
Phil Gates * BBC Wildlife *
With a gift for turning the arcane into amusing prose,
Winston explains how natural pheromones, sterilization
strategies, and insect predators are better alternatives for pest
control. * Science News *
Winston is probing and thoughtful, whether he is exploring
what he contends was an unwarranted public outcry over a 1992
spraying in Vancouver of the biological control Bacillus
thuringiensis to thwart a gypsy-moth invasion, or the
likelihood that the public will view as a failure the ongoing
effort in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia to stop the
spread of codling moths (an apple pest) by releasing sterile male
moths. -- Robert Braile * Boston Globe *
[An] erudite and fascinating book... Before telling some very good
tales about multiplying moths, gnawing rates and invading coyotes,
Winston sets down a few key economic facts... [And] the
lesson here, says Winston, reads like a Greek tragedy: The more
modern agriculture removes biodiversity from the land, the more
susceptible it becomes to pests, which ultimately means more
pesticides. This deadly cycle explains why the promise of
biological controls of the use of natural predators has remained
just that, a promise. -- Andrew Nikiforuk * Globe and Mail *
Mark Winston's study of pest-control regimes and his
conclusion that we should go easier on pests...is a compelling
argument and certainly lively. -- Michael McCarthy * The
Independent *
If the dangers are well known and legislators are prepared to
regulate the release of chemicals into the environment, is there
still a problem? Mark Winston, in his book Nature
Wars, firmly believes there is... I recommend it to all those
concerned with green issues, be they scientist, student or layman.
-- Graham Elmes * Times Higher Education Supplement *
Winston makes a strong case for pest management versus our
ill-fated attempts at pest eradication. He supports his approach
with a battery of case histories illustrating the complex
political, biological, economic, social and personal interactions
that lie behind each pest management decision... Winston also
discusses the problems arising from the evolution of
pesticide-resistant populations of target pests, the impact of
control measures on non-target organisms, the tendency of consumers
to overreact to the sight of a single cockroach or a blemished
fruit, and the attitude that we have a divine right to manipulate
nature to shape a world of human design. * American Biology Teacher
*
Mark Winston is that rare person: an entomologist (studier
of insects) who, to judge from Nature Wars, would make a
charming and entertaining dinner party guest. In Nature
Wars, short listed for last year's BP Natural World book award,
he shows how dependence on chemical pesticides, and unrealistic
consumer standards for bug-free houses and gardens, have
contributed to massive over-use of dangerous chemicals. -- Andy
Neather * Earth Matters [UK] *
Mark Winston's Nature Wars provides a useful, sane,
and easily accessible discussion about one of the most durable of
environmental problems: pest control... Nature Wars provides
a very useful summary of the biological complexities of pesticides
and their alternatives. -- John H. Perkins * Environmental Ethics
*
In his book Nature Wars, Mark Winston, a full
Professor of Biological Sciences at Simon Fraser University, has
managed to make the topic of pest management fascinating even to
those not working in the field. It is well researched, probing, and
accessible... Winston hits all the relevant scientific points and
his folksy style presents them in language that anyone can
understand. -- Barbara Kukan * ESC (Entomological Society of
Canada) Bulletin *
In Nature Wars Professor Winston brilliantly strips
away the media hype to unveil issues of significance such as the
indiscriminate and wanton destruction of thousands of insects and
arthropod species, seemingly for our benefit. With his background
in biological sciences, he builds up a strong case as to why we
need to protect these creatures for our own sake. * European
Business Report *
Mark Winston is writing about a population that has lost its
perception of itself as a species amongst other species, enjoys
horror movies about giant insects, killer bees or human-insect
transformations and can no longer see itself as part of a global
life-cycle. He offers some thoughtful and moderate views on the way
forward... It is a most readable book, a work of real scholarship
and provides insights into social history and the phenomena of
public opinion as well as the fascinating survey of
pest-management. -- Brigitte Norland * Resurgence [UK] *
[Nature Wars] is an extremely coherent and concise statement
of progressive thinking on how to manage agricultural pests...it
positively exudes good sense and rationality. I strongly recommend
it to anyone who has thought twice about biting into a shiny apple
on a supermarket shelf... Winston has thought hard about
pest management, and believes passionately that it can be improved.
This is an excellent book and should be very widely read. -- H. C.
J. Godfray * Tree [UK] *
Winston here enlightens those who bewail the massive use of
chemical insecticides outdoors-and indoors reach for bug spray at
first sight of a creepy crawly. Writing for a general, not
technical, reader, Winston descants on campaigns against rats and
roaches, then discusses the main strategies for 'naturally'
controlling agricultural pests... A balanced overview. -- Gilbert
Taylor * Booklist *
Winston manages to shape the art and science of pest
management into a fascinating subject. Pests eat our homes and
crops and clothes, they transmit disease, they plague our skin,
hair, and digestive tracts... And, Winston asserts, 'it is time to
reconsider the terms of engagement.' Why? Because chemicals attack
a pest's nervous system, which (unfortunately) resembles our own
rather closely. The consequences: the author cites one million
cases, worldwide, of human pesticide poisoning annually (and 20,000
fatalities among those). Moreover, pest resistance to chemicals is
growing even as the chemicals continue to decimate natural predator
populations essential to the earth's balance. Winston suggests
various remedies for our faulty attitudes and strategies... Like a
new Rachel Carson for the new millennium, Winston delivers a
nontoxic dose of much-needed common sense. * Kirkus Reviews *
It has been over 30 years since Rachel Carson's Silent
Spring sounded the alarm about the dangers of chemical
pesticides. Now Winston is issuing another wake-up call by
showing how our battle against pests has become a war on nature.
Winston provides case studies demonstrating alternative methods of
pest control, explaining how political, social, economic, and
biologic interactions behind pest-management decisions have
contributed to our failure to replace toxic chemicals as our first
method of choice. The author argues that we need to change our
philosophy from eradication to control because we will not win the
war. Winston has written a convincing and necessary book. Highly
recommended for academic and public libraries. * Library Journal
*
Before you reach for the can of Raid, reach for this book. Mark
Winston explains why our hopes of total victory in the war
against pests are as mistaken as they are futile, and he provides a
measured dose of common sense that should prevent many a hasty
attack. -- Bill McKibben, author of Hope, Human and Wild: True
Stories of Living Lightly on the Earth
It has been over 30 years since Rachel Carson's Silent Spring (LJ 9/15/62) sounded the alarm about the dangers of chemical pesticides. Now Winston (biology, Simon Fraser Univ.; Killer Bees, LJ 2/1/92) is issuing another wake-up call by showing how our battle against pests has become a war on nature. Winston provides case studies demonstrating alternative methods of pest control, explaining how political, social, economic, and biologic interactions behind pest-management decisions have contributed to our failure to replace toxic chemicals as our first method of choice. The author argues that we need to change our philosophy from eradication to control because we will not win the war. Winston has written a convincing and necessary book. Highly recommended for academic and public libraries.‘Teresa Berry, Univ. of Tennessee Lib., Knoxville
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