(CNN) -- If you're eating non-organic celery today, you may be ingesting 67 pesticides with it, according to a new report from the Environmental Working Group. The group, a nonprofit focused on public health, scoured nearly 100,000 produce pesticide reports from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to determine what fruits and vegetables we eat have the highest, and lowest, amounts of chemical residue. Most alarming are the fruits and vegetables dubbed the "Dirty Dozen," which contain 47 to 67 pesticides per serving. These foods are believed to be most susceptible because they have soft skin that tends to absorb more pesticides. "It's critical people know what they are consuming," the Environmental Working Group's Amy Rosenthal said. "The list is based on pesticide tests conducted after the produce was washed with USDA high-power pressure water system. The numbers reflect the closest thing to what consumers are buying at the store." The group suggests limiting consumption of pesticides by purchasing organic for the 12 fruits and vegetables. "You can reduce your exposure to pesticides by up to 80 percent by buying the organic version of the Dirty Dozen," Rosenthal said. The Dirty Dozen Celery Peaches Strawberries Apples Domestic blueberries Nectarines Sweet bell peppers Spinach, kale and collard greens Cherries Potatoes Imported grapes Lettuce Not all non-organic fruits and vegetables have a high pesticide level. Some produce has a strong outer layer that provides a defense against pesticide contamination. The group found a number of non-organic fruits and vegetables dubbed the "Clean 15" that contained little to no pesticides. The Clean 15 Onions Avocados Sweet corn Pineapples Mango Sweet peas Asparagus Kiwi fruit Cabbage Eggplant Cantaloupe Watermelon Grapefruit Sweet potatoes Sweet onions What is a pesticide? A pesticide is a mixture of chemical substances used on farms to destroy or prevent pests, diseases and weeds from affecting crops. According to the USDA, 45 percent of the world's crops are lost to damage or spoilage, so many farmers count on pesticides. The Environmental Protection Agency, the FDA and the USDA work together to monitor and set limits as to how much pesticide can be used on farms and how much is safe to remain on the produce once it hits grocery store shelves. "In setting the tolerance amount, the EPA must make a safety finding that the pesticide can be used with 'reasonable certainty of no harm.' The EPA ensures that the tolerance selected will be safe," according the EPA's website. Although the President's Cancer Panel recently recommended that consumers eat produce without pesticides to reduce their risk of getting cancer and other diseases, the low levels of pesticides found on even the Dirty Dozen are government-approved amounts. Can small amounts of pesticides hurt you? The government says that consuming pesticides in low amounts doesn't harm you, but some studies show an association between pesticides and health problems such as cancer, attention-deficit (hyperactivity) disorder and nervous system disorders and say exposure could weaken immune systems. The Environmental Working Group acknowledges that data from long-term studies aren't available but warns consumers of the potential dangers. "Pesticides are designed to kill things. Why wait for 20 years to discover they are bad for us?" Rosenthal said. Some doctors warn that children's growing brains are the most vulnerable to pesticides in food. "A kid's brain goes through extraordinary development, and if pesticides get into the brain, it can cause damage," said Dr. Philip Landrigan, chairman of the department of preventive medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. Can pesticides be washed away? Not necessarily. The pesticide tests mentioned above were conducted after the food had been power-washed by the USDA. Also, although some pesticides are found on the surface of foods, other pesticides may be taken up through the roots and into the plant and cannot be removed. "We've found that washing doesn't do much," Rosenthal said. "Peeling can help, although you have to take into account that the pesticides are in the water, so they can be inside the fruit because of the soil." All fresh produce, whether it's grown with or without pesticides, should be washed with water to remove dirt and potentially harmful bacteria. And health experts agree that when it comes to the Dirty Dozen list, choose organic if it's available. "To the extent you can afford to do so, [parents] should simply buy organic, because there have been some very good studies that shows people who eat mostly organic food reduce 95 percent of pesticides [in their body] in two weeks," Landrigan said.'Dirty dozen' produce carries more pesticide residue, group says
www.whatsonmyfood.org/index.jsp
Look on the right and you can click on the foods alphabetically.
We need to find lawyers who'll do a mass lawsuit against Monsanto and all the other companies poisoning us. Money works so much faster than whining and complaining.
How could all those pesticides be on celery? It seems too expensive and too much work to add over 60 pesticides to one vegetable. I'd like to hear the story about how they do that, if anyone has that info.
It would be nice to have local watchdogs checking soils and produce because it's hard to believe our local farmers use all those chemicals, but I don't trust the Farmer's Market sellers when they say they don't use pesticides.
Those numbers of chemicals on produce in the site I put here sounds really high. When you read about wind blowing pesticides into organic farms and some organic pesticides being toxic how can we know what's on our food?
www.grinningplanet.com/jokes-cartoons.htm
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What's with the spammer in here? (jonusb above this)
I think the entire planet is saturated in toxins now so everything we eat or drink or breath or step in or step on or wash with or touch has toxins and chemicals in it.
It's a miracle we are still alive, but no surprise we are all so sick.
Yes, particularly xenoestrogens such as dioxins. To make matters worse many of these xenoestrogens are extremely stable and can remain intact in the soil for 30 to 100 years. DDT for example takes about 100 years to break down. Therefore even though it is no longer sprayed in the US this does not mean we are not still being exposed.
Lead is another big toxin in our soils. This comes mainly from the decades of using leaded gasoline. The lead being heavy settled in to the soil where it is picked up by plants. Then animals, including humans, ingest these plants and the lead deposits in their tissues.
What's with the spammer in here? (jonusb above this)
Maybe Moreless found a new line of work
First of all, the celery!!!!!!!!!!! One wouldn't even think it possible to cram so many poisons on/in one food. And how curious that the more "healthy" a food is; such as broccoli
or the recently-hyped cherry, the more loaded with pesticides...hmmm. As if peoples' natural 'medicines' were a pesticide-delivery system. Feels like mass genocide at work, on land AND at sea.
Certain plants are more prone to insect attack than others. Part of the problem is itself going to be manmade. First of all wild plants have more resistance partially from the fact that the stresses they are exposed to are going to lead to the production of more phytochemicals. This includes alkaloids that act as natural pesticides. This natural increase in phytochemicals is one of the reasons I prefer wildcrafted herbs over the weaker "organic" herbs.
Another part of the problem with modern agriculture is that the plants are grown in such tight quarters and with artificial fertilizers that do not supply all the nutrients the plants require. This weakens the ability of the plants to fight off insect attack even further.
So they spray with insecticides, but now they create yet another problem. Not all the insects are killed. The survivors build up a tolerance to their offspring making them resistant as well. So they have to use different pesticides or mixtures of pesticides, which the insects build up a tolerance to as well and the cycle goes on.
This is VERY weird...(and makes me question the integrity of the information)What do you make of the fact that according to this site, beef liver is completely free of pesticides? How is that possible? seems it can only be that some sort of 'food science'(engineering) is at work, so that toxins will not accumulate in the liver--After all, if it were working as livers work, then wouldn't it be -ugh, poor animals- inedible?
Beef liver is not going to be free of pesticides. Looking at what they said the testing shows N/A (not available) under the different categories. This tells me that the liver was not pesticide free but rather that they did not test for pesticides in the beef liver.
Charts like this, and hearing almost all foods were toxic, is what lead me to believe I was safer eating snickers bars and drinking irish cream liquor.
Call me crazy and lazy, but at the time it made sense, and that's what led to candida overgrowth.
I agree with you that this chart is questionable. How can that many pesticides even be available, and how could that many get into our foods?
Who can afford to buy all organic, or grow everything?
Charts like this, and hearing almost all foods were toxic, is what lead me to believe I was safer eating snickers bars and drinking irish cream liquor.
Call me crazy and lazy, but at the time it made sense, and that's what led to candida overgrowth.
I agree with you that this chart is questionable. How can that many pesticides even be available, and how could that many get into our foods?
Who can afford to buy all organic, or grow everything?
Organic is not as clean as people think. Most organic farms still irrigate with surface water that gets contaminated as it flows down from the mountains past cities and non-organic farms. The plants then pick up these contaminates.
Your best bet is to just buy regular produce then rinse them off or better yet soak them in water with some peroxide or even a little bleach added to oxidize any herbicide and pesticide residue. After soaking for 15 minutes rinse them well and let the surface dry to prevent microbial growth during storage. If you have access to ozone even better. The produce can be rinsed then placed in a bag where ozone is blown in. The ozone will oxidize any herbicides and pesticides on the produce and it also destroys the microbes and ethylene gas that spoils the produce. This extends the shelf life of the produce by weeks.