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Article

Can Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Contribute to Sustainable Agriculture?

Department of Urban, Environmental Policy and Planning, School of Arts and Sciences, Tufts University, Medford, MA 02155, USA
Sustainability 2021, 13(4), 2337; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13042337
Submission received: 15 January 2021 / Revised: 14 February 2021 / Accepted: 16 February 2021 / Published: 21 February 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Weed Control in the Agroecosystems)

Abstract

:
Glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) have become the leading agricultural herbicides used globally since the development of genetically engineered herbicide-tolerant crops. This paper investigates whether GBHs are consistent with or supportive of sustainable agriculture. Agricultural sustainability is defined by generally agreed upon goals: (1) promoting agroecology; (2) protecting soils and the Earth’s natural resources; (3) protecting biodiversity; and (4) enhancing the quality of life and health of farmers, farm workers, and society. Through an in-depth examination of the scholarly literature, the paper explores whether the scientific studies of GBHs are consistent with their sustainable applications in agriculture in the areas of human health, non-tillage agriculture, soil quality, aquatic ecosystems and beneficial, non-target species. Based on the four generally agreed upon goals listed above for agricultural sustainability, the paper finds that GBHs are not consistent with sustainability goals.

1. Introduction

The beginnings of agriculture can be traced to the Middle East, most likely in the Fertile Crescent, around 10,000–12,000 years ago [1]. Up until that time humans were hunter gatherers, moving when required to find new food sources. Over centuries farmers used a multitude of methods to protect crops from insects and weeds. The latter were pulled out by hand until the development of chemical herbicides.
Sustainable agriculture was introduced as a concept in 1987 in the United Nations’ report titled Our Common Future (also called the Brundtland Report, named after the chairperson of the commission), issued by the World Commission on Environment and Development [2].
The application of biotechnology to produce crops was introduced in the mid-1990s [3]. Agriculture began to transition from traditional breeding, which included genetic selection, exposure of plant cells to radiation and mutagenic chemicals, and hybridization, to molecular breeding, which involves genetic modification through recombinant DNA techniques or genetic editing with CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats).
The introduction of genetically engineered seeds, beginning with insect resistant and herbicide tolerant crops, brought international opposition. In response, the European community established a regulatory system that involved risk analysis, testing programs, and very restricted adoption of GMOs. In contrast, the United States did not require testing but began with the assumption of “substantial equivalence”: that GMOs were substantially or essentially equivalent to crops produced through traditional breeding methods [4]. The methods used to produce the crops, i.e., recombinant DNA techniques or, subsequently, CRISPR, were not factors in crop risk assessment.
As new biotechnology products entered the agricultural sector, the interest in sustainability grew globally, activated by an awareness of climate change, the pollution of the oceans and the loss of biodiversity, the decline in soil quality, and the rise in agrochemical pollution. The United States and Brazil became leaders in the large-scale agriculture utilization of genetically engineered crops (also known as GMOs). Most of the staple crops in these countries, including corn and soybeans, were GMO products. It should be recognized that glyphosate is used functionally with GMOs to maintain a monocultural crop system.
With such large sectors of the agricultural economy dedicated to GMO crops, the question of whether GMOs were or could be compatible with sustainable agriculture began to gain serious attention. Some agricultural experts have asserted that new plant breeding technologies (molecular breeding) offer considerable potential for sustainable agriculture and food security. Qain wrote that GMOs can increase yields, increase crop diversity, and create crops with better resistance to pests and diseases, with more resilience to climate change and improved nutritional quality [5]. Others have reached a contrary conclusion. Allison Wilson in her book chapter, “Will gene-edited and other GM crops fail sustainable food systems?”, argues that molecular breeding produces unintentional traits in commercial GM crops, which results in their failure to meet sustainable agriculture criteria [6]. One subset of GMOs, such as corn and soybeans, were designed to be used with glyphosate-based herbicides [7]. This paper will explore the question of whether this class of herbicides can contribute positively to sustainable agriculture.
Since glyphosate-based herbicides represent one component of a system of agriculture based on the molecular breeding of crops, methodologically, one cannot prove that a component is sustainable without taking into consideration the entire system. However, if it can be shown that a component of the agricultural system is unsustainable, that is, it violates the conditions of sustainability, then it can be argued that the agricultural system is unsustainable. The paper begins by outlining the core principles of sustainable agriculture and then discusses whether glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) meet these standards.

2. What Is Meant by “Sustainable Agriculture”?

In Our Common Future, the World Commission on Environment and Development report (1987), also called the Brundtland Report, it is stated that [8]:
“rapid growth combined with deteriorating income distribution may be worse than slower growth combined with redistribution in favour of the poor. For instance, in many developing countries the introduction of large-scale commercial agriculture may produce revenue rapidly but may also dispossess many small farmers and make income distribution more inequitable. In the long run, such a path may not be sustainable; it impoverishes many people and can increase pressures on the natural resource base through over commercialized agriculture and through the marginalization of subsistence farmers. Relying more on smallholder cultivation may be slower at first, but more easily sustained over the long term.”
The concepts that underscore sustainability are protecting the Earth’s natural resources for future generations, equitable income distribution from the production of food, and promoting smallholder cultivation. According to the report, the challenge of sustainable agriculture is to raise not just average productivity and incomes, but also the productivity and incomes of those poor in resources. Food security is not just a question of raising food production, but of ensuring that the rural and urban poor do not go hungry during the short-term or amidst a local food scarcity. All this requires the systematic promotion of equity in food production and distribution. Elsewhere the report notes: “Land use in agriculture and forestry must be based on a scientific assessment of land capacity, and the annual depletion of topsoil, fish stock, or forest resources must not exceed the rate of regeneration.” Regenerative agriculture is the operative term.
E. Lichtfouse et al. wrote: “While conventional agriculture is driven almost solely by productivity and profit, sustainable agriculture integrates biological, chemical, physical, ecological, economic, and social sciences in a comprehensive way to develop new farming practices that are safe and do not degrade our environment” [9].
The National Academies’ book “Toward Sustainable Agricultural Systems in the 21st Century” [10] proposes as a definition of sustainable agriculture: Improving sustainability is a process that moves farming systems along a trajectory toward meeting various socially determined sustainability goals as opposed to achieving any particular end-state. Agricultural sustainability is defined by four generally agreed upon goals:
  • To satisfy human food, feed, and fiber needs, and contribute to biofuel needs.
  • To enhance environmental quality and the resource base.
  • To sustain the economic viability of agriculture.
  • To enhance the quality of life of farmers, farm workers, and society as a whole.
From these convergent viewpoints on sustainable agriculture, we use as guiding points: promoting agroecology, protecting the resource base of natural systems for future generations including and especially the soil, protecting biodiversity, and enhancing the quality of life and health of farmers, farm workers, and society as a whole. Buechs discusses the importance of indicators for biodiversity and sustainable agricultural systems [11]. Applying these concepts as our criteria, we can now investigate the scientific literature on the herbicide glyphosate and its many formulations to see if agriculture that is based on this herbicide fulfills these sustainability goals. Our first review will be on the safety of glyphosate to farmers, farm workers, and society.

3. Glyphosate and Human Safety

Henri Martin was a Swiss chemist working for a pharmaceutical company in 1950 when he discovered a synthetic compound called glyphosate, a derivative of the amino acid glycine. The compound was not found to have therapeutic value.
In 1970, Monsanto scientists were reviewing chemicals for water softening applications. Quite by accident they found several synthesized compounds related to glyphosate that exhibited herbicidal properties. With Monsanto’s entry into the agricultural biotechnology sector, these compounds had some potential value. Soon thereafter, Monsanto patented a formulation of glyphosate under the trade name Roundup. It received its first approval from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a broad-spectrum herbicide in 1974. The EPA classified the active ingredient in Roundup, notably glyphosate, in 1985 as a possible human carcinogen based on rodent studies. Roundup was re-registered by EPA in 1993, whereupon the agency found “it does not impose unreasonable risks or adverse effects to humans or the environment.” EPA’s assessment was based heavily on unpublished industry-funded studies [12,13]. Roundup went off patent in 2000 resulting in different formulations, some with higher concentrations of glyphosate [14].
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) of the World Health Organization issues periodic reports on potential chemical carcinogens. In 2017, as part of its review of a number of chemicals, the IARC reported its finding that glyphosate was a “probable human carcinogen”, specifically citing non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The IARC’s finding that glyphosate was a probable human carcinogen was based on peer reviewed published studies [15]. Since the IARC’s report was issued, juries have ruled in favor of plaintiffs who have claimed that glyphosate has caused their cancer. Some subsequent studies have disputed the claim. In 2020, Denato et al. undertook a meta-analysis of epidemiological studies on the association between occupational exposure to glyphosate and cancer. They reported “no overall evidence of an increased risk for both NHL and multiple myeloma [16].” Williams et al. concluded that glyphosate is unlikely to pose a carcinogenic risk to humans [17].
Based on the IARC report and multiple jury decisions, glyphosate fails to meet one factor for sustainable agriculture: its unproven safety for farmers and applicators. Neither the IARC nor the EPA cite any definitive human studies on glyphosate toxicology. The IARC based its “probable carcinogen” designation largely on animal studies. Many studies on humans, their cells or semen, revealed suggestive evidence of adverse health effects of glyphosate-formulated herbicides.
Many other studies point to possible human effects of glyphosate, which, while not definitive, do paint a picture of an agricultural chemical that does not support sustainability criteria [18]. Some studies have found residues of glyphosate in food and drinking water, with consumers being exposed to higher levels from many different sources. The effects of these exposures are currently not known but raise additional questions about the safety of the herbicide to humans [19]. A consensus statement of 14 scientists concluded that the regulatory estimates of tolerable daily intakes for glyphosate in the European Union and the United States is based on outdated science and that preliminary data suggest that old assumptions about glyphosate safety are now in question. They reported: “A thorough and modern assessment of GBH (glyphosate-based herbicide) toxicity will encompass potential endocrine disruption, impacts on the gut microbiome, carcinogenicity, and multi-generational effects” [20].
Munoz et al. (2020) studied glyphosate as a possible endocrine-disrupting chemical (EDC) and concluded that glyphosate “satisfies at least 8 KCs (key characteristics) of an EDC but noted that “prospective cohort studies are still needed to elucidate the real effects on the human endocrine system” [21].
The IARC based its “probable human carcinogen” designation largely on animal studies. Several human studies have revealed suggestive evidence of adverse health effects of GBHs, including a meta-analysis supporting the linkage between GBH and non-Hodgkin lymphoma [22]. Parvez et al. (2018) undertook the first study of glyphosate exposure of pregnant women in the United States. Their study provided direct evidence of maternal glyphosate exposure and its correlation with shortened pregnancy. Moreover, they found quantifiable levels of glyphosate in over 90% of the pregnant women they tested [23]. Another study examined the sperm of healthy men, which investigators exposed to small quantities of Roundup. Their results indicated that the direct exposure of semen samples to Roundup at relatively low concentrations had adverse effects on sperm motility [24].
Woźniak et al. (2018) studied the effect of Roundup and glyphosate on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). They found that Roundup, at low concentrations, caused much greater damage to DNA (genotoxicity) than glyphosate by itself [25]. Hao et al. (2020) demonstrated that Roundup damages human lung cells and constitutes a potential human health risk [26]. Hao et al. (2019) reported that Roundup induces DNA damage and cell death in human cells [27]. Additionally, Defarge et al. (2026) showed that glyphosate-based herbicides had endocrine effects on human cells [28].
In a systematic review of the literature on the effects of glyphosate exposure on human health in both epidemiological and in vitro studies, Agostini et al. (2019) found “the deleterious effects of GLY (glyphosate) exposure on human health were observed in epidemiological studies… however, most of these studies have not determined the GLY dosage to confirm a direct effect. While GLY toxicity is clear in human cells, epidemiological studies investigating individuals exposed to different levels of GLY have reported contradictory data. Therefore, based on the current available in vitro and epidemiological data, it is not possible to confirm the complete safety of GLY use” [29].
Hurtado et al. (2020) studied the effects of aerial spraying of glyphosate on sugar crops in a region of Columbia. They found that mass spraying, while increasing productivity for the sugar growers, resulted in the “toxic dispossession” of ethnic communities in the region [30]. People left the area because of the adverse health effects they experienced from the sprayed crops.
In summary, the epidemiological studies show mixed results on whether glyphosate-based herbicides are hazardous to humans, while in vitro studies show extensive evidence that GBHs are toxic to human cells.

4. Animal Studies of GBHs

Animal studies (see Table 1) have shown a diverse range of adverse impacts for glyphosate-based herbicides. For example, Owagboriaye et al. (2017) found that one formulation of glyphosate has been found to be an endocrine disruptor in animal studies [31].
“Our study has shown that Roundup has the capacity to induce reproductive toxicity in the male reproductive system of the exposed animal. It is also a potent endocrine disruptor. We can conclude that the disruption in the normal testicular cellular architecture observed in the rats exposed to Roundup in this study, which could probably lead to abnormal hormonal secretion and abnormal sperm properties. may be attributed to the oxidative stress inflicted on the gonad of the exposed rats by the active ingredient in Roundup. This assumes significance and a public health concern considering increasing use of Roundup and presence of its residues in food and drinking water, thereby, increasing possible routes of exposure in humans.”
Another rodent study by Lozano et al. (2018) revealed an adverse effect of Roundup on rat gut microbiome [32]. Pandey et al. (2015) reported on Roundup’s disruption of the adrenal gland of male rats [33]. Additionally, Kubsad et al. (2019) studied pregnant female rats exposed to glyphosate during 8–14 days of gestation. They found that glyphosate induced epigenetic transgenerational effects and wrote that “glyphosate was found to promote the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of disease and pathology through germline” [34]. Negligible effects were observed on the gestating mother and her offspring, but a significant increase in pathology and disease were found in the 2nd and 3rd generation rats. Other studies on rodents and rabbits showing adverse effects from Roundup or other GBHs are given in Table 1.
Table 1. Glyphosate-Based Herbicides: Effects on rodents, rabbits, aquatic species, beneficial insects and non-target species, and soil. A sample of the literature.
Table 1. Glyphosate-Based Herbicides: Effects on rodents, rabbits, aquatic species, beneficial insects and non-target species, and soil. A sample of the literature.
A. Rodents & RabbitsToxic EffectsSources Reporting Effects
Rabbit SemenToxic effects Cai et al., 2017 [35]
Rat uterusDisrupts uterine developmentSchimpf et al., 2016 [36]
Rat BrainToxic effects onHernandez-Plata et al., 2015 [37]; de Souza et al., 2019 [38]
Rats, Endocrine SystemAdverse effects on development & endocrine systemPandey et al., 2015 [33]; Manservisi et al., 2019 [39]
Rodent BehaviorNeurological effects on rodentsCattani et al., 2017 [40]
Rodent ReproductionReproductive toxicity Owagboriaye et al., 2017 [31]
Rodent Pregnant FemaleEpigenetic transgenerational pathologiesKubsad et al., 2019 [34]; Milesi et al., 2018 [41]
Rodent, Mammary GlandAlters development of mammary glandGomez et al., 2020 [42]; Zanardi et al., 2019 [43]
Rodent, Gut MicrobiomeIncrease of homosysteine;
risk of cardiovascular disease
Hu et al., 2020 [44]
Rat, Intestine & Gut MicrobiomeInduces inflammatory responses in small intestine and alters gut microbiome Tang et al. [45]; Chlopecka et al., 2016 [46]
Mice oocytesInduces damage in mice oocytesZhang et al., 2019 [47]
Mice offspringInduces lipid metabolism Disruption in offspringRen et al., 2019 [48]
Mice, perinatal exposureDecreased sperm; endocrine effectsPham et al., 2019 [49]
B. SoilImpact onSource Reporting Effects
Soil healthDegradedSilva et al., 2007 [50]; Van Bruggen et al., 2018 [51]
Microbial populationReduced growth & activity of soil biota esp; N-fixing bacteriaZobiole et al., 2010 [52]; Meena et al. [53]; Santos & Flores, 1995 [54]
EarthwormsReduced tomato growth with no fruit; increases soil acidity; diminishes earthworm vitalityOwagboriaye et al., 2020 [55]; Garcia-Pérez et al., 2016 [56]
Soil pseudomonasAdverse effects on Pseudomonas speciesAristilde et al., 2017 [57]
C.Beneficial Insects & Non-Target SpeciesEffectsStudies Reporting Effects
BeesGut microbiota damaged;
Navigation disturbed;
Reproduction decline
Balbuena et al., 2014 [58]; Vázquez et al., 2018 [59]; Vázquez et al., 2020 [60]; Dai et al., 2018, [61]; Battisti et al., 2021 [62]; Motta et al. [63]; Graffigna et al., 2020 [64];
Butterflies (Monarch)Destruction of food supplyTaylor, 2020 [65]; Pleasants, 2017 [66]; Crone et al., 2019 [67]; Pleasants & Oberhauser 2013 [68]; Flockhart et al., 2015 [69]
Butterfly, C. XanthusDeleterious effects on growth and development Ferreira-Junior et al., 2017 [70]
Quails (Japanese)Delayed plummageRuuskanen et al., 2019 [71]
Herbivores (feeding on non-target crops)Affects composition of microbiotaGómez-Gallego et al., 2020 [72]
ReptilesSuppression of immune functionSiroski et al., 2016 [73]
Frog (Amazonian)Mutagenic and lethal effectsFerrante et al., 2020 [74]
Frog, embryosTeratogenic effects and growth inhibitionBabalola et al., 2019 [75]
D. Aquatic SpeciesEffectsStudies Reporting Effects
Fish Impairs fish behavior, induces oxidative stress on brainFaria et al., 2020 [76]
Fish embryos (Odontesthes humensis embryos)Morphological alterationsZebral et al., 2017 [77]
CrayfishDisruption of homeostasis Altering biochemical & Immunological functionBanaee et al., 2020 [78]
Rainbow troutSublethal effects on liver cellsSantos et al., 2019 [79]
Zebra fishDisrupted embryo development & energy metabolism; oxidative stress, cardiovascular toxicityLopes et al., 2017 [80]; Panetto et al., 2019 [81]; Roy et al., 2016 [82]
CrabImbalances in male reproductive function Ovarian growth impairment Canosa et al., 2014 [83]; Avigliano et al., 2018 [84]
SalamanderAffects natural behavior Exhibits non-monotonic dose responsesGhandi & Cecala 2016 [85]
TadpolesLethal effects; Sublethal effects affecting Tadpole mobilityHerek et al., 2020 [86]; Agostini et al., 2020 [87]
PicoplanktonStructural changes in Picoplankton; decrease in abundanceSabio y Gracia et al., 2020 [88]

5. Non-Tillage Agriculture and Weed Resistance

Chemical herbicides have a special role in agriculture. They destroy weeds without destroying commercial crops. Pre-emergent herbicides prevent weeds from ever growing, while post-emergent herbicides destroy weeds that have already grown. Prior to herbicides, farmers used tillage practices, whereby they turn over the soil to destroy weeds whose roots have already been established. By turning over the soil there is a loss of rich topsoil which results in the pollution of surface waters and air. Tillage practices also involve fossil fuel use, contributing to atmospheric CO2.
Glyphosate-tolerant crops have contributed to the worldwide increase in agricultural herbicide applications. According to Powles (2008, 360): “In transgenic glyphosate-resistant crops (GRCs) glyphosate can be applied to the crop (post-emergence) to remove emerged weeds without crop damage. GRCs enable glyphosate to be used as an in-crop selective herbicide, providing easy, economical, efficient weed control along with other agronomic advantages such as earlier seeding and no-tillage” [89].
The non-tillage advantage is a key factor for sustainability since it protects soil quality. According to Powles (2008) [89]: “Tillage has been reduced where GR (glyphosate-resistant) crops have been adopted…Utilization of tillage results in significant fossil fuel use with associated negative impacts.” Both on the grounds of protecting soil from erosion and reducing atmospheric carbon, glyphosate has a positive sustainability effect on agriculture.
The benefits of glyphosate were reported by Duke (2020):
“the net influence of glyphosate on the environment has been generally positive when comparing its use with the weed management methods that it replaced…Adoption of GR (glyphosate-resistant) crops reduced tillage practices, increasing soil retention of carbon and decreasing the use of fossil fuels in agriculture”.
[90]
Kudsk and Mathiassen (2020) note: “Non-tillage/conservation agriculture is viewed as an effective strategy to prevent soil erosion and the loss of nutrients, which could become larger problems without glyphosate” [91].
The story would end here were it not for the development of weed resistance to the herbicide. Glyphosate-based herbicides were used for 20 years without observed cases of glyphosate-resistant weeds. Following the introduction of GMOs and glyphosate-tolerant crops, glyphosate-resistant weeds began to appear throughout the world. The first case of weeds exhibiting glyphosate resistance was discovered in 1998 [92]. By 2010, 10 weed species in the United States had been identified as glyphosate resistant, as well as 19 weed species globally. Alcάntara-de la Cruz et al. reported 51 weed species resistant to herbicides in Brazil in 2020 [93].
Without the management of diversity in these agro-ecosystems, glyphosate-based herbicide use will not be sustainable. Such diversity includes the introduction of non-herbicide weed management along with herbicide use, as well as the varying of herbicides. By themselves, and at the rate at which they have been used, GBHs are not sustainable for agriculture because they will reach the end of their effectiveness through resistant weeds and thus must be met with a multiplicity of other methods of weed control.
Ravet et al. (2020) reports on glyphosate resistance occurring across North America [94] and Loddo et al. (2020) discuss glyphosate resistance growing in Europe [95]. Gaines et al. report on the glyphosate-resistant weed invasion in South America [96]. Powles (2008) ends his article with the following somewhat optimistic conclusion [89]: “Through avoiding intense glyphosate release and by maintenance of diversity, the longevity of the precious herbicide resource glyphosate and excellent GRC technologies can be sustained for future harvests and future generations.” New research on glyphosate-based herbicides and sustainability continues to be carried out given the ubiquitous nature of these herbicides [97].
The simple transition from GBHs to non-till agriculture did not occur. According to Price et al. (2011), the introduction of transgenic seeds and glyphosate-resistant crops did not result in non-tillage farming. Rather it led to conservation: “Large-scale successful implementation of conservation tillage across the United States came only after the introduction of broad-spectrum herbicides for weed control…Conservation tillage has numerous environmental benefits, including controlling soil erosion, which can be attributed to the accumulation of crop residues and the accumulation of crop residues and increased soil organic matter near the soil surface” [98]. The authors argue that with the rapid spread of glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth, commonly called pigweed, the efficacy of glyphosate is significantly compromised and with it the loss of conservation tillage.
In summary, GBHs by themselves cannot produce a non-tillage sustainable agricultural system, but to be successful must include other conservation methods and used with non-herbicide weed control practices.

6. Glyphosate and Soil Quality

One of the core principles of sustainable agriculture is to protect the quality of the soil for future generations. Non-tillage or conservation tillage agriculture is supposed to do just that. However, it is important to consider the infusion of glyphosate-based herbicides including their adjuvants into the soil. Silva et al. (2007) have studied the distribution of glyphosate in agricultural top-soils in the European Union. Their study concluded [50]:
“…high levels of glyphosate and of its main metabolite AMPA (aminomethylphosphonic acid) have been often detected in agricultural soils across the EU. The presence of glyphosate and AMPA in agricultural soils may not only form a risk for soil health but also a potential risk of further spreading of these compounds across land, water, and air domains. Indeed, besides potential effects on local edaphic communities and on humans, that can be exposed to these substances by inhalation of contaminated dust particles, dermal contact, or ingestion of contaminated surface water, wind and water erosion have the potential to transport contaminants to all the environmental compartments: atmosphere, other soils, and surface waters. This information should be fully accounted for in reconsidering approval and use of GlyBH (glyphoosate-based herbicides). Additional efforts should be made to fully quantify the extent of soil contamination by glyphosate residues in agricultural soils worldwide, and to assess the related risk for humans and the environment.”
Van Bruggen et al. (2018) report on the alteration of microbes in the soil from glyphosate applications. “Shifts in microbial compositions due to selective pressure by glyphosate may have contributed to the proliferation of plant and animal pathogens” [51]. In greenhouse tests, Zobiole et al. (2010), in relation to glyphosate-altered rhizosphere microorganisms, found: “Glyphosate applied to the GR soybean, regardless of cultivar, negatively impacts the complex interactions of microbial groups, biochemical activity, and root growth that can have subsequent detrimental effects on plant growth and productivity” [52]. Additional studies on the effect of GBHs on soil microbiota are listed in Table 1.

7. GBHs, Milkweeds, and Monarch Butterflies

Monarch butterflies are among nature’s most beautiful living organisms. Their orange wings are covered with black lines and bordered with white dots. Monarchs are known for their seasonal migration, when they travel up to 4800 kilometers. They are pollinators of many types of wildflowers. Yet, these magnificent creatures are being decimated because their primary food source, milkweed, is destroyed by the massive spraying of herbicides across the landscape. Those who see the threat of extinction of Monarchs speak of the “milkweed limitation hypothesis.” As reported by Taylor Jr. et al. (2020) [65]:
“The milkweed limitation hypothesis is supported by data showing that in the early 2000s the majority of Monarch production came from common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca, in corn and soybean fields in the Midwest ….and that the abundance of those milkweeds declined precipitously due to glyphosate herbicide use in those fields… The loss of the milkweeds from corn and soybean fields began in the late 1990s with the adoption of glyphosate-tolerant crops.”
The studies of tagged Monarchs have corroborated the hypothesis that milkweed destruction is the cause of their decline. “Over the past decade and a half, milkweeds were virtually eliminated from agricultural fields.” (Pleasants et al, 2016 [66]). An estimated 71% of the Monarch production potential of milkweeds on the Midwest landscape was eliminated, amounting to 25 million hectares of agricultural habitat that no longer had milkweeds. Crone et al. (2019) [67] reported that “increased use of glyphosate explains 77% of annual variation in Monarch abundance through time.” Pleasants and Oberhauser (2013) [68] estimated that “there has been a 58% decline in milkweeds on the Midwest landscape and an 81% decline in Monarch production in the Midwest from 1999 to 2010.” The evidence is very clear that the use of GBHs has reduced milkweed, which has largely contributed to the decline of Monarch butterflies [69].

8. Glyphosate and Honeybees

Honeybees are critical to crop pollination. Extensive spraying of glyphosate has damaged the gut microbiota of honeybees. Motta et al. found “that, exposure of bees to glyphosate can perturb their beneficial gut microbiota potentially affecting bee health and their effectiveness as pollinators” [99]. The authors state that for most bees the gut microbiota contains an enzyme targeted by glyphosate. Another study by Balbuena et al. (2014) [58] found that sublethal doses of glyphosate affects the honeybee’s navigation. “In honeybees, exposure to the levels of GLY (glyphosate) commonly found in agricultural settings impairs the cognitive capacities needed to retrieve and integrate spatial information for a successful return to the hive…honeybee navigation is affected by ingesting traces of the most widely used herbicide worldwide, with potential long-term negative consequences for colony forging success.” Other studies and a meta-analysis support the conclusion that GBHs are toxic to honeybees [59,60,61,62]. GBH effects on other non-target species are given in Table 1.

9. Effects on Aquatic Species

When glyphosate enters surface waters it interacts with aquatic species. Zebral et al. (2017) [77] studied the effects of glyphosate-based herbicides on fish embryos. They concluded: “Roundup has the potential to produce morphological alterations in fish embryos even at the lower and ecologically relevant concentration tested (0.36 mg a.e./L). This result corroborates the hypothesis that glyphosate alters the retinoic acid signaling pathway.”
Studies of GBHs on other aquatic species report toxic effects on crayfish, Rainbow trout, Zebra fish, crabs, salamanders, tadpoles, frogs, and picoplankton. Additionally, by inducing oxidative stress on the brain, the herbicides impair fish behavior (see Table 1: D. Aquatic Species).

10. Glyphosate Versus Glyphosate Formulations

Many studies that have claimed to test glyphosate herbicides have not always distinguished pure glyphosate from herbicides containing glyphosate and other chemical compounds, referred to as glyphosate-based herbicide formulations. This created a confusion within the toxicology community since glyphosate was registered as the sole active ingredient, while the so-called inert ingredients or adjuvants (i.e., surfactants) were often proprietary and not disclosed. More than that, they were not tested independently. When researchers began studying the adjuvants, they learned that some of these compounds were more toxic than glyphosate [100].
Seralini and Jungers (2020) reported [101]: “We originally demonstrated the differential toxicity between glyphosate and its formulations marketed as Roundup…we found that Roundup contained formulants that were 1000 times more toxic, and at a lower threshold more endocrine-disrupting than glyphosate.” These results complicate the assessment of glyphosate’s contribution to sustainable agriculture. Since the worldwide leader is Roundup, which consists of glyphosate and adjuvants (glyphosate formulation), most of the research on GBH toxicity has been carried out on Roundup or pure glyphosate, unless specifically stated.
Tóth et al. (2020) [102] studied thirteen glyphosate-based herbicides including Roundup and pure glyphosate, for their cytotoxic and hormonal effects. They concluded that “glyphosate is the least toxic compound in the glyphosate-based formulations. Co-formulants are not inert, between which synergistic effects could be greater than those with glyphosate.” POE-15 (polyethoxylate-15, also a derivative POEA), a surfactant used in glyphosate formulations (GBHs), was banned in 2016 in the EU because of the toxicity of the adjuvant. GBHs are available in Europe with other co-formulants, which are listed as “inert compounds.” Tóth et al. stated that in their study [102], “most of the investigated eleven free-marketed POE-15-free GBHs exhibited acute and chronic cytotoxicity and direct estrogenic and androgenic effects, while the pure active ingredient glyphosate acid proved to be ineffective in the applied biotests. Connection could not be found between the biological effects and the type or concentration of glyphosate salt; therefore, it can be concluded that toxicity and hormonal activity are linked to the formulation.”
Tsui and Chu (2003) [103] have reported on the toxic effects of glyphosate, and the glyphosate-formulated products of Roundup and their most common co-formulant polyethoxylated tallow amine (POEA), on various model species selected from aquatic ecosystems, i.e., bacteria (Aliivibrio fischeri), microalgae (Selenastrum capricornutum, Skeletonema costatum), protozoa (Tetrahymena pyriformis, Euplotes vannus), and crustaceans (Ceriodaphnia dubia, Acartia tonsa). Based on the results, POEA was found to be the most toxic compound.

11. Discussion

The aim of this paper was to evaluate whether glyphosate-based herbicides (GBHs) are consistent with the goals and methods of sustainable agriculture. Since GBHs are but one part of an agricultural system, one can only offer evidence that this class of herbicides is consistent with the goals of sustainable agriculture, as discussed earlier in this paper, if they are not inconsistent with them. If GBHs violate enough criteria for sustainability, then the system in which they are part of cannot be considered sustainable. If GBHs are not found to be inconsistent with sustainable agriculture, it does not prove that the system as a whole is sustainable.
This method is reminiscent of Karl Popper’s principle of falsifiability. Consider the hypothesis “All ravens are black.” Finding a black raven does not prove that the hypothesis is true, although it is consistent with the hypothesis. However, finding a non-black raven falsifies the hypothesis. Falsification has more power than confirmation.
The hypothesis, “GBHs are consistent with sustainable agriculture,” was evaluated by examining whether there was falsifying empirical evidence. The literature search revealed sufficient falsifying instances of the hypothesis (Table 1) that show this class of herbicides to be harmful to soil health, human and mammalian health, and biodiversity.
Figure 1 shows the number of articles indexed in Web of Science under the key words “glyphosate toxicology”, of which there are almost 3000. The research into glyphosate begins to grow after 2005. Even without definitive direct human epidemiological studies demonstrating adverse health effects of GBHs, albeit there is sufficient circumstantial evidence of toxic human effects, the rodent and other animal studies provide an important proxy indicating that humans and the environment are at risk.
This study has not undertaken a complete review of every scientific inquiry into each of the effects listed in Table 1. The sampling of research is not a weight-of-evidence evaluation for each parameter, which some may argue is necessary for a risk determination. With the exception of assuming that all of the studies that show unsustainable effects are false, given the number and range of human and animal studies with adverse effects, there is sufficient reason to conclude that GBHs do not meet the goals of sustainable agriculture.
One may argue that herbicides are necessary for modern agriculture, that GBHs are safer and more effective than others that have been approved, and that farming without glyphosate would be a challenge. This paper makes no claim about the comparative risks, benefits, or level of sustainability of GBHs compared to other herbicides. If one could not do without herbicides to feed the seven plus billion people on the planet, the question remains: are GBHs the closest we can get to sustainability? It may very well be that herbicide-driven agriculture, whatever the herbicide, is not consistent with sustainability goals. One of the claimed benefits of GBHs is their crop yield benefits. Wiese and Steinmann (2020) [104] report that previous studies have overestimated the benefits of glyphosate usage and that such studies were not relevant for specific farming conditions. The transition to sustainable agriculture and crop diversification is addressed in Locola et al. (2020), where monoculture and the role of GBHs are not considered inevitable [105].
In conclusion, whether or not GBHs are viewed as essential or unessential to contemporary agriculture, and notwithstanding their role in non-tillage agriculture, this study shows that glyphosate-based herbicides do not reach the bar of agricultural sustainability, with respect to humans and the environment, making the system they are part of unsustainable.

Funding

This research received no external funding

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Glyphosate papers listed by year in Web of Science: 1973–2020. Legend: The total number of papers listed in Web of Science under the key word “glyphosate toxicology” over the span of 47 years is 2942. The smallest number is 1 (1973) and the largest is 271 (2019).
Figure 1. Glyphosate papers listed by year in Web of Science: 1973–2020. Legend: The total number of papers listed in Web of Science under the key word “glyphosate toxicology” over the span of 47 years is 2942. The smallest number is 1 (1973) and the largest is 271 (2019).
Sustainability 13 02337 g001
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Krimsky, S. Can Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Contribute to Sustainable Agriculture? Sustainability 2021, 13, 2337. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13042337

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Krimsky S. Can Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Contribute to Sustainable Agriculture? Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):2337. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13042337

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Krimsky, Sheldon. 2021. "Can Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Contribute to Sustainable Agriculture?" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 2337. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13042337

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