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    Home»Health»Are Berries Safe To Eat? What You Need To Know About the Pesticide Dimethoate
    Health

    Are Berries Safe To Eat? What You Need To Know About the Pesticide Dimethoate

    By Ian Musgrave, University of AdelaideMarch 10, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Child Face Berry Strawberries Blueberries Raspberries
    Dimethoate has long been used to protect berry crops from insect damage, but its ability to disrupt nervous systems means it must be tightly regulated. Credit: Shutterstock

    Australia paused the use of a common berry pesticide after rising consumption increased potential exposure, especially for young children.

    Australia’s agricultural regulator has temporarily halted the use of a widely used pesticide called dimethoate on blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries.

    The one-year suspension is not based on new evidence about the chemical itself. Instead, the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) says the decision reflects changes in how much fruit people are eating. As berry consumption has increased, the potential for dietary exposure to the pesticide has also risen.

    According to the agency, young children between the ages of two and six may now face a higher chance of exceeding recommended exposure limits.

    Here is what is currently known about dimethoate and whether it remains safe to include berries in your diet.

    What is dimethoate?

    Dimethoate is a pesticide that has been used in Australia since 1956. It belongs to a class of pesticides that inhibit the enzyme acetylcholinesterase. This prevents the breakdown of a key neurotransmitter (chemical messenger) and so paralyzes an insect’s nervous system, killing it.

    Mammals, including humans, also have the enzyme acetylcholinesterase, and can be poisoned by this class of pesticide.

    So careful regulation of both the application of dimethoate and levels of dimethoate residues on food are required so we are not exposed to harmful levels.

    The amount of maximum permissible residues depends, in turn, on how much someone is exposed to from their food.

    To do this, you need to have estimates of how much residue is on food and how much food we eat.

    How much is too much?

    The APVMA has a maximum limit for how much dimethoate we should be exposed to from our food. This is known as the acute reference dose (or ARfD), which is 0.02 milligrams per kilogram of body weight.

    This maximum dose includes a safety factor of ten. In other words, the maximum dose allowed is ten times lower than the lowest dose that has no effect.

    This dose was set in 2017. But it is consistent with current World Health Organization limits and Canadian regulations. Australia’s maximum dose is lower than limits from the United States Environmental Protection Agency.

    So, what’s changed?

    But our dietary habits have changed. Australian consumption of blueberries, blackberries, and raspberries has increased substantially since the APVMA last assessed dimethoate. Consumption is up 285–962% compared to levels considered for its 2017 assessment.

    Eating more berries is a good thing. But this means that current trace levels of dimethoate on berries (0.0033 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day for a toddler) might potentially exceed the maximum limit for children aged two to six years.

    The APVMA states: “The level of residues detected is unlikely to pose a serious risk to human health, but has proposed suspension of these specific dimethoate products as a precautionary measure.”

    What can you do?

    Don’t give up on berries. Eating berries is an important part of a balanced diet. And the APVMA is at pains to emphasize the risk of harm is low.

    The simplest approach is to wash your berries. You should be washing fruit and vegetables anyway. Washing helps get rid of soil, and potentially harmful microorganisms.

    Washing berries will not remove all dimethoate, but can substantially reduce the levels so you can continue to enjoy them and their benefits.

    Adapted from an article originally published in The Conversation. The Conversation

    Disclosure: Ian Musgrave has received funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council to study adverse reactions to herbal medicines and has previously been funded by the Australian Research Council to study potential natural product treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. He is currently a member of one of the Therapeutic Goods Administration’s statutory councils.

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