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View Full Version : News: Bees in more trouble than ever after bad winter



Shaka_Khan
03-25-2010, 12:09
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100324/ap_on_sc/us_food_and_farm_disappearing_bees

By GARANCE BURKE and SETH BORENSTEIN, Associated Press Writers Garance Burke And Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Writers – Wed Mar 24, 8:05 am ET

MERCED, Calif. – The mysterious 4-year-old crisis of disappearing honeybees is deepening. A quick federal survey indicates a heavy bee die-off this winter, while a new study shows honeybees' pollen and hives laden with pesticides.

Two federal agencies along with regulators in California and Canada are scrambling to figure out what is behind this relatively recent threat, ordering new research on pesticides used in fields and orchards. Federal courts are even weighing in this month, ruling that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency overlooked a requirement when allowing a pesticide on the market.

And on Thursday, chemists at a scientific conference in San Francisco will tackle the issue of chemicals and dwindling bees in response to the new study.

Scientists are concerned because of the vital role bees play in our food supply. About one-third of the human diet is from plants that require pollination from honeybees, which means everything from apples to zucchini.

Bees have been declining over decades from various causes. But in 2006 a new concern, "colony collapse disorder," was blamed for large, inexplicable die-offs. The disorder, which causes adult bees to abandon their hives and fly off to die, is likely a combination of many causes, including parasites, viruses, bacteria, poor nutrition and pesticides, experts say.

"It's just gotten so much worse in the past four years," said Jeff Pettis, research leader of the Department of Agriculture's Bee Research Laboratory in Beltsville, Md. "We're just not keeping bees alive that long."

This year bees seem to be in bigger trouble than normal after a bad winter, according to an informal survey of commercial bee brokers cited in an internal USDA document. One-third of those surveyed had trouble finding enough hives to pollinate California's blossoming nut trees, which grow the bulk of the world's almonds. A more formal survey will be done in April.

"There were a lot of beekeepers scrambling to fill their orders and that implies that mortality was high," said Penn State University bee researcher Dennis vanEngelsdorp, who worked on the USDA snapshot survey.

Beekeeper Zac Browning shipped his hives from Idaho to California to pollinate the blossoming almond groves. He got a shock when he checked on them, finding hundreds of the hives empty, abandoned by the worker bees.

The losses were extreme, three times higher than the previous year.

"It wasn't one load or two loads, but every load we were pulling out that was dead. It got extremely depressing to see a third of my livestock gone," Browning said, standing next to stacks of dead bee colonies in a clearing near Merced, at the center of California's fertile San Joaquin Valley.

Among all the stresses to bee health, it's the pesticides that are attracting scrutiny now. A study published Friday in the scientific journal PLOS (Public Library of Science) One found about three out of five pollen and wax samples from 23 states had at least one systemic pesticide — a chemical designed to spread throughout all parts of a plant.

EPA officials said they are aware of problems involving pesticides and bees and the agency is "very seriously concerned."

The pesticides are not a risk to honey sold to consumers, federal officials say. And the pollen that people eat is probably safe because it is usually from remote areas where pesticides are not used, Pettis said. But the PLOS study found 121 different types of pesticides within 887 wax, pollen, bee and hive samples.

"The pollen is not in good shape," said Chris Mullin of Penn State University, lead author.

None of the chemicals themselves were at high enough levels to kill bees, he said, but it was the combination and variety of them that is worrisome.

University of Illinois entomologist May Berenbaum called the results "kind of alarming."

Despite EPA assurances, environmental groups don't think the EPA is doing enough on pesticides.

Bayer Crop Science started petitioning the agency to approve a new pesticide for sale in 2006. After reviewing the company's studies of its effects on bees, the EPA gave Bayer conditional approval to sell the product two years later, but said it had to carry a label warning that it was "potentially toxic to honey bee larvae through residues in pollen and nectar."

The Natural Resources Defense Council sued, saying the agency failed to give the public timely notice for the new pesticide application. In December, a federal judge in New York agreed, banning the pesticide's sale and earlier this month, two more judges upheld the ruling.

"This court decision is obviously very painful for us right now, and for growers who don't have access to that product," said Jack Boyne, an entomologist and spokesman for Bayer Crop Science. "This product quite frankly is not harmful to honeybees."

Boyne said the pesticide was sold for only about a year and most sales were in California, Arizona and Florida. The product is intended to disrupt the mating patterns of insects that threaten citrus, lettuce and grapes, he said.

Berenbaum's research shows pesticides are not the only problem. She said multiple viruses also are attacking the bees, making it tough to propose a single solution.

"Things are still heading downhill," she said.

For Browning, one of the country's largest commercial beekeepers, the latest woes have led to a $1 million loss this year.

"It's just hard to get past this," he said, watching as workers cleaned honey from empty wooden hives Monday. "I'm going to rebuild, but I have plenty of friends who aren't going to make it."

miotas
03-25-2010, 12:19
The Daleks are coming!

Philippus Flavius Homovallumus
03-25-2010, 12:26
The problem is the horrfic way bees are treated, almost no other domestic animal is so abused. I mean, seriously, shipping bees across the country to pollenate Orchards!

Tristuskhan
03-25-2010, 14:39
I have deep trust in the chemicals industry to pay for corrupt "scientists" to deny any responsability in the collapse of bee colonies. Who wants to bet?
The process is ongoing in europe for something like ten years, though. At first, the pesticide "Gaucho" was responsible. Industry made a minor change in the formula, renamed it "Regent", and, mind you, nothing changed except the fact that true scientists must now prove that Regent is responsible, a process that will take some years again, and so on...

Louis VI the Fat
03-25-2010, 14:50
I have deep trust in the chemicals industry to pay for corrupt "scientists" to deny any responsability in the collapse of bee colonies. Who wants to bet?
The process is ongoing in europe for something like ten years, though. At first, the pesticide "Gaucho" was responsible. Industry made a minor change in the formula, renamed it "Regent", and, mind you, nothing changed except the fact that true scientists must now prove that Regent is responsible, a process that will take some years again, and so on...Aye!

I am getting quite worried about all of this. Climate change, water pollution, air quality - these happen slowly. They can suffocate ecosystems, but these are slow processes that can be often be halted at some point. Usually at the point where the slash-and-burn tactics of the perpetrators have ceased to be profitable, and the warnings of the experts have turned into uncontestable reality.

By contrast, the 'dissapearing bees' is in environmental terms almost an overnight event.

Tristuskhan
03-25-2010, 20:44
They can suffocate ecosystems, but these are slow processes that can be often be halted at some point.

Dear Loulou, always so optimistic...


Usually at the point where the slash-and-burn tactics of the perpetrators have ceased to be profitable, and the warnings of the experts have turned into uncontestable reality.

....Mediterranean Red Tuna anyone?

HoreTore
03-25-2010, 21:23
By contrast, the 'dissapearing bees' is in environmental terms almost an overnight event.

....And your dinner plate will disappear just as quickly.

Prince Cobra
03-26-2010, 06:34
Genetically Modified Organisms + chemicals = less bees

Why are the people always surprised? Sad indeed.

HoreTore
03-26-2010, 09:02
Genetically Modified Organisms

We've been genetically modifying organisms since we invented agriculture.

You're probably right about the chemicals though...

gaelic cowboy
03-26-2010, 12:44
It's obvious it's a combination of the migratory beekeeping allied with the high energy foods we feed hives nowadays which are killing them, were basically putting them under too much stress.

Well over half the profit in beekeeping is in the almond orchards in California but most of them are transported from out of the state on big trucks. That is surely wrong sticking 500 hundred hives on the back of a lorry and driving from Iowa or summit cannot be good for the bee.

If beekeeping tottaly collapsed the amount of food on the plate would be seriously reduced time to call a halt to this codology methinks the almond business needs to be reduced soon

Subotan
03-26-2010, 14:36
Don't worry

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GM8c4wOy-iQ

HoreTore
03-27-2010, 10:02
If beekeeping tottaly collapsed the amount of food on the plate would be seriously reduced time to call a halt to this codology methinks the almond business needs to be reduced soon

If the bees were to disappear completely it would mean that just over half the plants we rely on for food would be extinct.

Or in other words, SERIOUS trouble.