defoliant

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defoliant

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

defoliant any one of several chemical compounds that, when applied to plants, can alter their metabolism, causing the leaves to drop off. In agriculture defoliants are used to eliminate the leaves of a crop plant so they will not interfere with the harvesting machinery. Their main military objective is to deprive the enemy of cover. In addition they have been used on food crops that have been considered potential sustenance for the enemy. Unfortunately, defoliants are not discriminating chemical weapons. Normally applied from the air, they are difficult to confine to a desired area and may thus contaminate watercourses, with disastrous effects on fish and other aquatic life. Human beings are also known to suffer toxic effects from them. Further, indigenous populations have suffered severe malnutrition when their food crops have been defoliated to prevent their use by the enemy. Possibly the severest and most long-lasting side effect of military defoliation is the disruption of the fragile jungle ecosystem. Contrary to appearances, the soils that underlie rain forests are not abundant in plant nutrients. Therefore, the ecosystem generally conserves and recycles the nutrients that do exist. Any massive disruption, such as killing or interfering with the metabolism of large numbers of plants, inevitably causes large amounts of nutrients to be washed away by rainfall. Also, when sunlight, which would normally be blocked by the leaves, falls on the claylike soil of the jungle, the soil bakes and becomes very hard. These conditions operate against reestablishment of normal vegetation. During the Vietnam War, U.S. forces used the defoliant Agent Orange , which is widely thought to have led to cancer and other side effects among military personnel and civilians.

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defoliant

The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military | 2001 | © The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military 2001, originally published by Oxford University Press 2001. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

defoliant dēˈfōlēənt n. a chemical that removes the leaves from trees and plants and is often used in warfare.

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Leukemia linked to agent orange. (Service).(chronic lymphocytic leukemia; chemical defoliant Agent Orange, used during the Vietnam War)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: VFW Magazine; 3/1/2003; ; 185 words ; ...based on an Institute of Medicine study that found sufficient evidence of an association between exposure to the chemical defoliant Agent Orange during the Vietnam War and CLL. For Vietnam vets afflicted with CLL (a disease in which too many infection-fighting... Read more
List of diseases linked to Agent Orange expanded. (defoliant used during the Vietnam War) (Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Jet; 11/1/1993; 76 words ; ...questions about the chemical. Added are three respiratory cancers of the lung, larynx and traches as well as a bone marrow cancer, which bring the total number of illnesses linked to Agent Orange to nine. Agent Orange is a defoliant used in Vietnam. Read more
Acute health effects of community exposure to cotton defoliants.
Magazine article from: Archives of Environmental Health; 11/1/1989; ; 700+ words ; ...Effects of Community Exposure to Cotton Defoliants ABSTRACT. In September and October of...symptoms and community exposure to cotton defoliants. Symptoms experienced during the 1987...are frequently sprayed aerially with defoliants and desiccants during autumn prior to... Read more
Higher estimate on Vietnam defoliant use. (Service).
Magazine article from: VFW Magazine; 6/1/2003; ; 149 words ; ...edition of Nature magazine, estimated that more than 1.8 million gallons of defoliants were sprayed over more than 10% of South Vietnam between 1961-71. The defoliants were nicknamed according to the colored stripes--such as purple, pink, white... Read more
Study confirms link of Agent Orange, diseases. (causal connection between chemicals used in warfare defoliants and cancer and other diseases) (Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Jet; 8/16/1993; 104 words ; ...of Medicine, a division of the National Academy of Sciences, has concluded there is evidence that chemicals used in wartime defoliants, like Agent Orange, can be tied to at least three forms of cancer and two skin disorders. The finding opens the door for increased... Read more
Veterans and Agent Orange; update 2006.(codename for military defoliant used in Vietnam)(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 9/1/2008; 153 words ; 9780309107082 Veterans and Agent Orange; update 2006. Institute of Medicine. National Academies Press 2007 871 pages $129.00 Hardcover RA1242 This volume from the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies has been written in compliance with US law requiring periodic updates to the 1994 report Read more
Risk factors for occupational illnesses associated with the use of paraquat (1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridylium dichloride) in California.
Magazine article from: Archives of Environmental Health; 9/1/1995; ; 700+ words ; PARAQUAT (1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridylium dichloride) is a defoliant and contact herbicide that has been used extensively on cotton and in orchards in California. Paraquat has been a medical concern... Read more
Bayer CropScience LP and International Specialty Products Inc. (ISP) sign an agreement through which Bayer CropScience will gain the exclusive rights to ISP's novel formulation delivery systems for several key active ingredients of Bayer CropScience.(AT CLOSING NEWS)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Agri Marketing; 7/1/2005; 95 words ; ...CropScience. Bayer CropScience currently uses ISP's patented delivery system technology in the company's Ginstar[R] EC cotton defoliant, which contains the active ingredients thidiazuron and diuron. The new agreement also allows exclusive use of these ISP delivery... Read more
Spina bifida benefits could expand. (Legislation).
Magazine article from: VFW Magazine; 6/1/2003; ; 149 words ; ...benefits for children whose parents were exposed to Agent Orange in such places as the Korean DMZ during the Vietnam War. The defoliant also was used in limited quantities at Fort Drum, N.Y., and Panama, and it was disposed of at Johnston Island in the Pacific... Read more
What do you think of our view? (letters and debate).
Magazine article from: Arena Magazine; 12/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...legislation. Then a man called about a flowering gum in a small reserve beside his house. Close to tears, he claimed that defoliant was being injected into holes drilled in the tree in the dead of night. He had mounted sleepless vigils, hoping to catch the... Read more
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