Landmark Study Underscores Wide-Ranging Benefits of Pesticide-Free Farming
A meta-analysis of 343 previously peer-reviewed studies from all over the world has found that organic crops contain more antioxidants and fewer pesticides than their non-organic counterparts, according to reporting in the Guardian.
The research, conducted by an international team of scientists led by UK professor of ecological agriculture Carlo Leifert, is published in the British Journal of Nutrition. It shows that the increased levels of antioxidants (between 18-69 percent) could have significant impact on human nutrition.
“If you buy, consistently, organic fruits and vegetables…you get one to even two extra servings of antioxidants from those organic foods compared to if you bought conventional brands,” said Charles Benbrook, a Washington State University researcher and the lone American co-author of the paper.
The frequency of occurrence of pesticide residues was found to be four times higher in conventionally grown fruits, vegetables, and cereals, which also contained significantly higher concentrations of the toxic metal cadmium. Cadmium has been linked to kidney damage and cancer.
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