Dirty Dozen & Clean Fifteen: Guide to Pesticides in Produce
Tuesday, Apr 19, 2016
For
many shoppers, trips to the grocery store come with the following
dilemma: buy organic or conventional produce? The latter has higher
levels of pesticides but an all-organic diet is not always affordable
or readily available. While a conventionally grown Hass avocado might
cost $1.99, an organic Hass avocado can set you back $2.79. There are
ways however, to eat healthier, even if you can't fill your grocery
basket with organic fruits and veggies.
The Environmental Working Group (EWG) puts out the annual
Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce,
which tells you which conventional produce has the most pesticides
(Dirty Dozen: these are better to buy organic) and which have the least
(Clean Fifteen: these you can buy conventional). Pesticides can cause
cancer,
lower IQs in children,
and skin and eye irritation, among other issues, studies show. Take a
look at the 2016 Shopper's Guide to Pesticides in Produce to help you
inform your next grocery list.
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1/13
Produce
on the Dirty Dozen list tested positive for several different pesticide
residues and showed higher concentrations of pesticides than other
produce.
2/13
USDA’s
2014 tests on strawberries found that growers used 60 different
pesticides in various combinations on the fruit and that some 40 percent
of the samples had residues of 10 or more pesticides. Part of the
reason for the high number of pesticides is that strawberries are grown
close to the ground and need to be protected from a range of predators —
plus they have no outer peel to protect against pesticides.
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4/13
A
single grape sample and a sweet bell pepper sample contained 15
pesticides. Nearly three-fourths of the 6,953 produce samples tested by
the USDA in 2014 contained pesticide residues. According to the EWG, the
findings are "surprising" since consumers are increasingly looking for
produce options without synthetic chemicals.
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5/13
Cucumbers
also made the Dirty Dozen list. The produce tested by the USDA has been
washed and the food that is normally peeled before eating is peeled
before being tested.
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7/13
Produce
on the Clean Fifteen list tested positive for the fewest pesticides.
These items tend to have thicker outer layers. Even if you buy
conventional produce in this list, you won't be consuming many
pesticides.
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8/13
Grapefruit,
pineapple and sweet corn are among the "cleaner" conventional produce;
89 percent of pineapples had no pesticide residue.
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10/13
Turns
out many pests don't like the taste of cabbage, which means fewer
insecticides need to be used, according to Lunder. Unlike lettuce,
cabbage also has a thicker outer layer making it harder for pests to
burrow through.
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11/13
The
specific pesticides that the USDA finds in produce varies from year to
year, depending on weather conditions, different pests and other
factors, but the overall figures are generally consistent.
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12/13
Of
all the produce tested, avocados were the "cleanest" with only 1
percent of samples showing any detectable pesticides. Seventy-three
percent of kiwis had no pesticides on them.
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13/13
Eighty-one percent of papayas, 78 percent of mangoes, and 62 percent of cantaloupes were found to have no pesticide residue.
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