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Science/Tech
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Title: Colony Collapse Disorder continues in 2009 as bees disappear from US
Source: News.com.au
URL Source: http://www.news.com.au/breaking-new ... s/story-e6frfku0-1225847174380
Published: Mar 30, 2010
Author: staff
Post Date: 2010-03-29 23:45:10 by buckeroo
Keywords: None
Views: 92
Comments: 2

THE decline in the US bee population, first observed in 2006, is continuing, a phenomenon that still baffles researchers and beekeepers.

Data from the US Department of Agriculture showed a 29 per cent drop in beehives in 2009, following a 36 per cent decline in 2008 and a 32 per cent fall in 2007.

This affected not only honey production but around $15 billion worth of crops that depended on bees for pollination.

Scientists call the phenomenon "colony collapse disorder", and it has led to the disappearance of millions of adult bees and beehives and occurred elsewhere in the world, including in Europe.

Researchers have looked at viruses, parasites, insecticides, malnutrition and other environmental factors but have been unable to pinpoint a specific cause for the population decline.

The rough winter in many parts of the United States will likely accentuate the problem, Jeff Pettis, lead researcher at Department of Agriculture's Bee Research Laboratory in Maryland, said.

Winter figures will be published in April.

But preliminary estimates already indicated losses of 30 to 50 per cent, president of the American Beekeeping Federation David Mendes said.

"There are a lot of beekeepers who are in trouble," he said.

"Under normal condition you have 10 per cent winter losses ... this year there are 30, 40 to 50 per cent losses."

He said the phenomenon probably resulted from a combination of factors but that the increased use of pesticides appeared to be a major cause.

"I don't put my bees in Florida because the last couple of years there has been tremendous increase in pesticide use in the orange crop to fight a disease," he said.

"It's a bacterium and the only way to control this disease is to use pesticide ... a few years ago they did not use any pesticide at all."

Research conducted in 23 US states and Canada and published in the Public Library of Science journal found 121 different pesticides in 887 samples of bees, wax, pollen and other elements of hives, lending credence to the notion of pesticides as a key problem.

Mr Pettis said the finding of pesticide residue was "troubling".


Poster Comment:

I wager that when this "colony collapse disorder" is fully explained you will see a tremendous surprise package based upon GM or "genetically modified" crops for inherent pest resistance. But by that time, bee honey and the honey industry will be another trivial issue in the annals of modern science attempting to feed the world with bogus malnutrition crap while natural pollination can not be resuscitated except in some research lab.

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#1. To: All (#0)

THE decline in the US bee population, first observed in 2006

I dug this old article from Cornell University out ... so the news item is not accurate based on 2006 .... still, there is no question that pesticides are destroying bee colonies while mites are impervious to the same.

What am I getting at? We are fucked.

Cornell entomologists predict FOR RELEASE: Oct. 23, 1997

Contact: Roger Segelken Office: (607) 255-9736 E-Mail: hrs2@cornell.edu

ITHACA, N.Y. -- Despite dramatic losses in wild honeybees and in colonies maintained by hobbyist beekeepers, Cornell University apiculturists say the pollination needs of commercial agriculture in the United States are being met -- for now -- by commercial beekeepers, although their supplies are precarious.

"Parasitic mite and mite-related diseases have caused the death of most wild honeybees, and left the commercial colonies at tremendous risk," said Nicholas W. Calderone, head of the university's Dyce Laboratory for Honey Bee Studies and an assistant professor of entomology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell. Calling the Varroa mite "the greatest threat to beekeeping," Calderone said beekeepers have only one registered chemical (Apistan) to control Varroa mites, "and European mites have already become resistant to that chemical, so we must assume the same thing will happen in the U.S."

Roger A. Morse, the recently retired Cornell professor of apiculture who tracked the mites and diseases for 25 years, concurs. "The mites represent the greatest threat to beekeeping since European bees were brought to this continent more than three centuries ago," Morse said. "But if we can get the results of research to the beekeepers, we can keep the crops growing and the honey flowing.

"It's true that these mite diseases have caused the death of 95 to 98 percent of the wild honeybee colonies. And more than half the hobby beekeepers have lost all or most of their colonies," Morse reported. "However, commercial beekeepers in this country are surviving, though they, too, have had serious losses. Research on the biology and control of bee diseases is making it possible for the industry to cope and provide the 1.2 million colonies needed for the pollination of crops we eat."

Some 90 different crops -- ranging from apples to zucchini and cantaloupes to cucumbers -- depend on honeybee pollination. To some extent, other insects will pollinate specific crops. However, no insect is as widely effective as the honeybee, and with the disease losses among wild and hobbyist honeybees, the commercial honeybees are more important than ever, Morse observed. The value added by honeybee pollination to American agriculture is estimated to range from $5 billion to $20 billion a year, he said.

Crop pollination is a migratory enterprise, with honeybees following seasonal crops -- week by week -- as trees and other plants bloom. Many commercial beekeepers' bees winter in Florida and travel on trucks that hold up to 500 colonies and 10 million to 15 million pollinators. Commercial beekeepers place their colonies near crops that need pollinating and charge growers for the service. Migratory beekeepers also sell the honey and other bee products that result, but fees for pollination services are their main source of income.

"We need to sustain a significant research effort to protect the safe and affordable supply of fruits and vegetables to which people have become accustomed," Calderone said. "Mites are living organisms, and mite populations will eventually adapt to whatever control measures we develop. It is an ongoing struggle that can never be completely won."

So research efforts at Cornell and other institutions are focusing on the biology of the Varroa mite, trying to understand how it locates bees in the first place. "If we can determine the host-location mechanism and discover the physical and chemical cues the mites use, we may be able to manipulate those cues for a control mechanism that will protect the bees," Calderone said. A number of natural products, including essential oils from herbs and spices, also are being examined for their potential in mite control, he added.

But a genetic solution -- breeding bees that are resistant to mites -- will be much more difficult, Calderone predicted. Even if beekeepers start with disease-resistant stock, it is almost impossible to control mating (with non-resistant males) when new queens leave the colonies, he explained. "Commercially viable, disease-resistant stock is the best answer, but that is years away, at best," Calderone said. 'Nonetheless, it remains the long-term focus of several research programs around the country."

Meanwhile, commercial beekeepers are surviving by applying good management techniques in their craft, Morse said. Dead colonies are replaced when beekeepers "split" their surviving colonies each year to maintain the stock needed for pollination.

"Growers who rent bees are well aware of the problems and are making plans with beekeepers for the colonies they will need for next spring's pollination," Morse said. "At the same time, there continues to be a great interest in hobby beekeeping, and hobbyists also are learning to cope with mites and diseases by tapping into resources like Cornell's apiculture extension program."

"Yes they have been experimenting on us for decades. The Chemtrails are just one aspect." -- Original_Intent, circa 2010-03-14 21:00:46 ET

buckeroo  posted on  2010-03-30   0:20:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: buckeroo (#0)

Africanized bees are doing fine, last I heard.

neocon - Israel = "libertarian" anti-white

Prefrontal Vortex  posted on  2010-03-30   13:04:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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