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Program

42st National Forum Series — 2025 (Virtual)

The Pesticide Threat to Environmental Health

Advancing Holistic Solutions Aligned with Nature

Session 2:  STAY TUNED!

Session 1:  October 29, 2025, 1:00 - 3:30 PM Eastern (ET)

Thank you for participating in this year's National Forum Series! 
 
 
INTRODUCTION—A CALL TO THE FORUM

We are all affected by how land is managed, food is grown, and nature is protected. Different experiences and perspectives may bring us to care about health and the environment and the devastating adverse effects of pesticides and toxic substances. However, ensuring a livable future requires us to cultivate a collective concern about daily decisions on the management of our personal and community spaces, the practices used to grow the food we buy, and the care that we as a society give to complex and fragile interrelationships that sustain the natural world on which we depend.  

This 42nd National Forum, The Pesticide Threat to Environmental Health: Advancing Holistic Solutions Aligned with Nature, challenges us—as concerned families, residents of our community, purchasers of products, advocates for policy, decision makers, and workers—to think holistically about ways we can join together to solve the existential threats to health, biodiversity, and climate for which petrochemical pesticides and fertilizers are major contributors.  

We must literally build our strategies from the ground up. Whether we live in a rural area, a city, or suburb, we are all intricately linked by the environment that we share. And for this reason, the Forum is intended to focus on how we can and must, in a practical way, embrace the natural systems that serve as the foundation for life. 

We start the Forum with case studies on what is being done now to integrate nature into the food production system in ways that are beneficial to the organisms in the environment and the health and economy of the areas where they live. The speakers will talk about their research and practical experience in identifying practices that embrace nature with a collaborative spirit and teach us about the value of bats and birds in productive agricultural systems, exemplifying the path forward in all aspects of modern life. 

The costs of conventional agriculture, reliant on petrochemical pesticides and fertilizers, have proven to be unsustainable, with incalculable trillions of dollars in present harm and future catastrophic losses, or externalities, associated with current toxic products and practices that are widely used, but unnecessary to our productivity and quality of life. The focus of this Forum session calls for a reorientation, replacing toxic practices with the nurturing of natural systems that sustain life. 

The speakers at the Forum give us an opportunity to step back, widen the lens, and think about redefining our relationship with nature in all aspects of our practices and advocacy.

Plan Now to Join Us as we come together to empower effective action and chart a path for a livable and sustainable future. You are part of the solution! Registration provides access to all sessions of the Forum.

Session 1: October 29, 2025, 1 - 3:30 PM Eastern, including Q&A 

Danilo Russo, PhD, Featured speaker
Professor of Ecology, University of Naples Federico II, Naples, Italy

Danilo Russo, PhD, is a full professor of ecology, an international leader in bat research, and coauthor of A Natural History of Bat Foraging: Evolution, Physiology, Ecology, Behavior, and Conservation. In A Call to Protect Common Species: Bats as a Case Study (Conservation Letters, A Journal of the Society of Conservation Biology, 2025), he writes the following: “The ongoing biodiversity crisis highlights the need for targeted conservation efforts, yet the focus often remains on rare and endangered species. This overlooks the vital role of common species, which are the ecological backbone of ecosystems, supporting the stability and functioning of biodiversity. We argue that common species, especially their population dynamics and potential tipping points, are too often neglected and that their conservation is urgent. We illustrate this issue using bats (Chiroptera) as a model. This diverse mammalian order features key ecosystem service providers, including insectivores, pollinators, and seed dispersers. Bats are sensitive to anthropogenic pressures, and many species, including common ones, face population declines and the impact of ecosystem disruption. Research and conservation must urgently be expanded to include common species. Through case studies, we demonstrate how common bat species are indicators of environmental changes and the urgent need to monitor their populations. We provide recommendations for improving research, enhancing conservation policies, and adopting a more inclusive framework acknowledging the indispensable role of common species in ecosystem services and biodiversity.”

Dr. Russo obtained a PhD in Zoology at the University of Bristol in 2002. His interests include habitat selection, resource partitioning, sensory ecology, social behavior, evolutionary biology, biogeography, and invasion ecology. Much of his research focuses on bats, but he also works on a range of other model organisms to answer the specific questions he is interested in. In 2019–2023, he chaired the Scientific Committee of the UNEP/EUROBATS Agreement (i.e., the Agreement on the Conservation of Populations of European Bats). Dr. Russo proudly serves as the editor-in-chief of the top-ranking zoological journal Mammal Review. He is also the main proposer and the chair of the Management Committee of the EU COST Action "CLIMBATS" (CA18107). Professor. Russo has published ca. 170 scientific articles in internationally respected journals, including Nature Communications, Current BiologyEcology Letters, and Biological Reviews. He has conducted fieldwork in many regions and environments across the globe, from African rainforests to Israeli deserts and European beech woodlands. He is an honorary member of the University of Bristol, UK

Jo Ann Baumgartner, Featured speaker
Executive Director, Wild Farm Alliance, Watsonville, CA

Jo Ann Baumgartner is the executive director of the Wild Farm Alliance (WFA) and coauthor of the recently released Protecting Birds in Agricultural Landscapes: Reduce risks to beneficial birds on the farm (2025), and many publications on the intersection between biodiversity conservation and agriculture, including beneficial birds, the conservation mandates within the National Organic Program regulations, and the co-management of food safety and conservation.  

Wild Farm Alliance focuses on farmland flyways, farmland wildways, and farmland waterways, advising farmers on the installation of nest boxes, perches, and other habitat features that support beneficial birds that provide pest control services. WFA helps farmers with the planting of hedgerows, habitat patches, and corridors that facilitate movement of beneficial species and links wild areas with farmland. The organization also supports the restoration of riparian buffers and protecting waterways across farms, improving water quality, reducing erosion, and protecting aquatic and terrestrial species. By publishing guides, offering webinars, creating short videos, hosting field days and offering technical support, WFA enables farmers and land stewards to adopt wild farming practices. Before joining WFA, Ms. Baumgartner addressed crop, livestock, and fiber issues, was senior research editor for a book of California's rare wildlife species, and was an organic farmer for over a decade. For her Master's research in the Environmental Studies Department at San Jose State University, she studied bird predation of insects in apple orchards. Her undergraduate degree is in Soil and Water Science from UC Davis. Ms. Baumgartner is based in Watsonville, California, and has been with WFA since the organization was founded in 2001. 

Click here to register!

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Thank you for joining us! Registration is always free for the National Forum Series! Any additional contribution is deeply appreciated to help cover costs and further contribute to our vital work!  

As a note, any donation of $40 or above qualifies for membership with Beyond Pesticides; please see our membership page for more information! All donations on this site are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law and are processed in U.S. dollars. Beyond Pesticides is a U.S. nonprofit, tax-exempt charitable organization (tax identification number 521360541) under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.