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  1. #1
    Member Member Phatose's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    I know they're important parts of the ecosystem some way or another, but all the same, every time I see a hornet I can't help but think "This is evil in an exoskeleton, and I'd be happy if every last one of them were to burn."

    30 attack 30,000, slaughter all the adults, and cart off the children to be eaten alive. Wow. The sheer, uncompromising, winner take all/loser is lunch brutality of it boggles the imagination. The insect kingdom certain is a glorious example of triumph or die, ain't it? And wasps....well, they seem to be even more cruel then most. I know their brains can't fathom such concepts, and they simple exist, but all the same.....evil in an exoskeleton.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    Well you people in the States have your own problems with Bees


    US bees buzz off without trace
    • Jacqui Goddard, Miami
    • February 20, 2007
    HUNDREDS of millions of bees have vanished in 22 US states, leaving keepers financially crippled and jeopardising $20billion of crops that need the insects for pollination.
    Beekeepers report their hives emptying within days because of an unexplained phenomenon known as colony collapse disorder (CCD), which spontaneously drives swarms to abandon their homes and disappear to die.
    While fungus, mites and pesticides have caused die-offs in the past, scientists admit they are struggling to solve this mystery.
    "There's no simple answer, no smoking gun," said Jerry Bromenshank, an entomologist at the University of Montana who is involved in the study.
    The problem first became apparent in eastern US states, such as Florida and Georgia, during the last three months of last year, but in recent weeks reports have poured in nationwide, sending shudders through the honey industry and triggering alarm among farmers who rent the insects to pollinate their crops. Apiarists move their hives around the nation according to the seasons; California requires 500,000 colonies at this time of year - about 15 billion bees - to pollinate its almond trees.
    Because of the deaths, bee supplies are down and the cost of renting them has quadrupled.
    Dave Hackenburg, a beekeeper in Pennsylvania since 1962, lost 2000 colonies - about 60 million bees - over a period of three weeks. In Florida with his remaining hives to pollinate citrus trees, he estimates that CCD has cost him up to $870,000.
    "It's the worst thing I've seen in 40 years of bee-keeping," he said. "It worries me a lot, because honeybees are like the canary in the coalmine - if something's bothering them, it's a warning to us humans too."
    Professor Bromenshank said: "The bees just vanish - that's one of the really strange things. In pesticide kills you normally find them dead, but in this case, one day you've got a big strong colony, two days later you've got virtually an empty box."
    Weak or ailing bee colonies are usually raided within hours for their honey by moths, beetles and other bees. But with CCD, the hives are left untouched.
    "We saw one guy in California with hundreds of boxes empty, each with 30 to 40 pounds of honey inside. There are two bee yards within half a mile and they should have been robbing it blind - we should have been fighting them off. But nothing."
    The Times

    http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...7-2703,00.html


    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
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  3. #3
    L'Etranger Senior Member Banquo's Ghost's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    Quote Originally Posted by Fisherking
    Professor Bromenshank said: "The bees just vanish - that's one of the really strange things. In pesticide kills you normally find them dead, but in this case, one day you've got a big strong colony, two days later you've got virtually an empty box."
    Clearly alien abduction.

    The UFOs haven't been able to find intelligent life amongst the humans they have probed so far, so they're trying the insect population.

    Simple explanation.

    "If there is a sin against life, it consists not so much in despairing as in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this one."
    Albert Camus "Noces"

  4. #4
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    Quote Originally Posted by Banquo's Ghost
    Clearly alien abduction.

    The UFOs haven't been able to find intelligent life amongst the humans they have probed so far, so they're trying the insect population.

    Simple explanation.

    If you say so then it must be so!

    I would have never looked at it in such a light. I thought George W. Bush was behind it in order to stop Granola production and limit the political lefts food supply.


    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
    Mark Twain

  5. #5
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/27/bu...=1&oref=slogin

    See it is still happening! Is Dick Cheney out there with a can of Raid?


    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
    Mark Twain

  6. #6
    Master of Few Words Senior Member KukriKhan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    Oz to the rescue, again:

    from fisherking's article: "...a beekeeper from Columbus, Mont., said he spent $150,000 in the last two weeks buying 1,000 packages of bees — amounting to 14 million bees — from Australia.

    He is hoping the Aussie bees will help offset the loss of one-third of the 7,600 hives he manages in six states..."
    Agri-business using illegal aliens to do work the US bees no longer want to do for such low wage/forage. Heh.
    Be well. Do good. Keep in touch.

  7. #7
    Hand Bacon Member ShadeHonestus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Be afraid. Bee very afraid.

    I wonder if all those Australian bees just run around saying "wtf mate" when they find out they are in the U.S.
    "There is a true glory and a true honor; the glory in duty done and the honor in the integrity of principle."

    "The truth is this; the march of Providence so long, that of the individual so brief, that we often only see the ebb of the advancing wave. It is history which teaches us to hope."

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