Guest guest Posted November 22, 2004 Report Share Posted November 22, 2004 Indian farmers turn to Cola to kill pests GUNTUR, India (Reuters) - Cotton farmers in some Indian villages are flocking to buy Coca-Cola and Pepsi, believing that the sugar in the fizzy drinks kills pests. Farmers say scientists advised them to mix pesticides with a sugary syrup to control pests, and they found the mixture cheaper and more effective than pure chemicals -- although soft drink makers and scientists dismissed the claims. N. Hamunayya, who has become a celebrity in his village in the southeastern state of Andhra Pradesh, said his crop survived an attack of pests which had resisted other remedies. "We found that all the colas had uniform effect on pests. The pests became numb and fell to ground," he said. He said the drinks had all the elements they needed: they were cheaper, sticky, fizzy, and attracted ants, which devoured the larvae of the pests. But Thirupathi Reddy, assistant director of the Regional Agri Research station, Guntur, says tests had refuted such claims. "We conducted some field trials on cotton crop at our research station. There was no boosting of productivity or eradication of pests," he says. Statements from Pepsi and Coca-Cola said there was "no scientific basis" for this practice. But their vendors are enjoying booming sales. Mantan Wali, who sells soft drinks in 17 villages in the region, said sales fizzed up, thanks to the farmers. "For the 10 days between August and September I had booming business. Instead of just 30 cases (each containing a dozen one-litre bottles) of cola I started selling almost 200 cases," he said. "We expected the sales to nosedive after the cacophony over pesticide residues in the cola drinks. Now I have to keep extra stock for the cotton farmers," he said. In February, an Indian parliamentary panel upheld a report by an environment group that said beverages made by Coca-Cola and PepsiCo contained pesticides and called for tougher safety standards. The U.S. firms strongly rejected the findings of the New Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment and said their products were safe. Largest ever field of impact craters uncovered 10:00 07 November 04 Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues. The discovery of the largest field of impact craters ever uncovered on Earth is the first evidence that the planet suffered simultaneous meteor impacts in the recent past. The field has gone unnoticed until now because it is partially buried beneath the sands of the Sahara desert in south-west Egypt. Philippe Paillou of Bordeaux University Observatory in Floirac, France, first noticed circular geological structures in the Sahara last year, while analysing radar satellite pictures of the area. Subscribe to New Scientist for more news and features Related Stories Asteroid impact craters could cradle life 10 September 2004 Impact site identified for biggest extinction 14 May 2004 Earth's volcanism linked to meteorite impacts 13 December 2002 For more related stories search the print edition Archive Weblinks Earth Impact Database Astronomical Observatory of Bordeaux (in French) The structures turned out to be part of a huge field of 100 craters spread over 5000 square kilometres near the Gilf Kebir plateau. The craters vary in diameter from 20 metres to 2 kilometres across. The previous largest known crater field covers a mere 60 square kilometres in Argentina. In February, Paillou led a joint Egyptian and French mission to find the site and examined 13 of the craters, confirming that they were the result of simultaneous impacts. But accurately dating the field has been tricky. Paillou estimates that it is roughly 50 million years old, relatively young in geological terms. The size of the field suggests that it could be the result of two or more meteors disintegrating as they entered Earth’s atmosphere, the first evidence of a multiple strike, he says. “Because the field is so big, it can’t have been made by one meteor,” says Paillou. But more information is needed to understand the event and its effects, and Paillou plans to return to the area next month. Jonathan Walter First a Terrorist, Now a Spy: Ordeal Continues for Conn. Businessman Indian American Scientists Account for 16% of DoD Research Activists Slam Homeless Tracking Astronomy Picture of the Day The Base 10 Number System Started When Monkeys Stood Up Indian Farmers Turn to Coca-Cola to Kill Pests Largest Ever Field of Impact Craters Discovered The Secret Lives of Molecules Exposed Color Sensitive Atomic Switch in Bacteria Butterfly Wings Dazzle with Science A Journey into the World of Reptile and Hooded Aliens Peter J. 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