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Science/Tech
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Title: Honey Bee Die-off Alarms Beekeepers
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2007/ ... ry=animals&guid=20070205144500
Published: Feb 15, 2007
Author: Larry O'Hanlon
Post Date: 2007-02-15 20:57:42 by Jethro Tull
Keywords: None
Views: 528
Comments: 55

Honey Bee Die-off Alarms Beekeepers

Larry O'Hanlon, Discovery News

Feb. 5, 2007 — Something is wiping out honey bees across North America and a team of researchers is rushing to find out what it is.

What’s being called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) has now been seen in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Georgia and way out in California. Some bee keepers have lost up to 80 percent of their colonies to the mysterious disorder.

"Those are quite scary numbers," said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture’s lead apiarist. Whatever kills the bees targets adult workers which die outside the colony — with few adults left inside, either alive or dead. The disorder decimates the worker bee population in a matter of weeks.

Aside from making honey, honey bees are essential for the pollination of tens of million of dollars worth of cash crops all over the United States. That’s why almond growers of California, for instance, are taking notice and pledging funds to help identify and fight the honey bee disorder.

Among the possible culprits are a fungus, virus, or a variety of microbes and pesticides. No one knows just yet. On first inspection, the pattern of die-offs resembles something that has been seen in more isolated cases in Louisiana, Texas and Australia, vanEngelsdorp said.

"Right now our efforts are on collecting as many samples as possible," said vanEngelsdorp. Bees that are collected are carefully dissected and analyzed to see what might have killed them.

Other researchers are keeping track of the problem using Google Earth, as well as cutting edge hive-sniffing and eavesdropping technology to investigate the problem.


Poster Comment:

Bees are like the salt in bread; you never really notice them until they’re missing. Albert Einstein put it bluntly, “No bees, no food for mankind. The bee is the basis for life on this earth.” Ninety percent of flowering plants and 40 percent of the foods we eat depend on pollinators — mostly honeybees. They pollinate $15 billion worth of agriculture annually in our country.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 40.

#2. To: Jethro Tull (#0)

Bees are like the salt in bread; you never really notice them until they’re missing. Albert Einstein put it bluntly, “No bees, no food for mankind. The bee is the basis for life on this earth.”

i had no idea.

christine  posted on  2007-02-15   21:04:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: christine, Jethro Tull (#2) (Edited)

Feral bees have been nearly absent here for many years. They truck colonies for thousands of miles now and beekeepers have never been busier or more in demand.

The Jacobi and Tracheal mites are but two of the culprits that are wiping out honeybees.

My friend is building a farm for aquaculture (maybe for Tilapia) down state and he had several bee colonies on his property, and someone, presumably a nearby farmer sprayed them with Raid and left the empty cans strewn around the now dead colonies.

Can you believe that a DE farmer doesn't understand the crisis or that bees pollinate nearly everything? (The contribution of butterflies and birds is minimal, and wind is unreliable)

I guess some idiot doesn't understand and when he saw a few bees and figured out that a city slicker hobbyist farmer was raising them on his adjoining property he decided to kill them.

The fact that we never see feral hives or even the occasional bee in the clover in our yards should have been a clue....

About seven years ago I tried to explain to a co-worker that life as we know it will end without bees he said, "as long as I have my steaks I don't care about veggies!"

I didn't try to explain that alfalfa hay (to feed cows) is the largest forage crop in the US and the pollination fees were established in the 1950's....

And, because of CJD we may lose our cattle, elk and deer, and, let's not even talk about the long term effects of DU.

People are so clueless that they have no idea that our future is by no means a sure thing.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2007-02-15   21:30:28 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: HOUNDDAWG (#10)

pollination fees were established in the 1950's....

what are these 'pollination fees'? Please explain inasmuch as we raised alfalfa on our ranch in Montana and as I bookkeeper I would know about pollination fees if we had to pay them.

rowdee  posted on  2007-02-16   0:24:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#37. To: rowdee (#31) (Edited)

what are these 'pollination fees'? Please explain inasmuch as we raised alfalfa on our ranch in Montana and as I bookkeeper I would know about pollination fees if we had to pay them.

When you see a news story about a tractor trailer filled with bee hives overturned on a highway, those bees were being moved to an area to pollinate, such as almonds, watermelons, faba beans and citrus crops.

Bee keepers get paid for that.

"The use of managed honey bee colonies for commercial crop pollination remains the most important function of the PNW beekeeping industry. The vast and diverse agriculture of the PNW relies on a healthy and strong beekeeping industry to maintain optimum production. An enhanced knowledge of pollination economics is critical to every beekeeper that enters into the world of commercial crop pollination. It is also important for those growers who rent colonies to understand current economic conditions of the beekeeping industry."

http://members.aol.com/beetools/99polin.htm

"More than a million hives will pour in to the almond orchards. The almond industry is booming, and growers expect they'll need closer to 2 million hives to pollinate all the new trees that will start bearing nuts by 2010. That means 80 percent of the approximately 2.3 million commercial bee colonies that exist now in the United States will have to travel to the California orchards just to meet demand."

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6299480

During the off season bee keepers take their bees to places like your state where land is cheaper to let them make honey from clover. So, if a bee keeper is nearby he is benefiting from you and vice versa and no fees apply.

from the link above:

"Then, many head back home with their bees to places like the Dakotas or Montana -- where land is cheaper -- for an intense summer of honey-making during clover season."

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2007-02-16   4:19:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#40. To: HOUNDDAWG (#37)

LOL...........for some reason I was trying to wrap my mind around some fee for each of these little buggers! Sort of a tax!

The fellas who had their hives at our place were there for a zillion years--certainly with the ranch owners before us. I hated to see them pull out, but then we didn't have any other place to put them without being a problem. For instance, we used 3 and 4 inch handlines to irrigate. Couldn't have the hives in the line of fire, er water, nor have them where a lot of human activity occured out of concern for being stung. So, right at the edge of the wooded area was perfect--easy access for them to the hives, and we could irrigate, and our cattle steered clear of the hives, and we never got stung.

The only sting I ever received at the ranch was when the damnmed hogs got out and were rootin around in a pile of straw and stirred up some hornets....them bastards blamed me. I wound up with about 20 stingson my head and shoulders before I could get in the barn. Never realized I could run that fast! My husband was at the very north end of our north field, with a tractor running, and he heard my screams.

rowdee  posted on  2007-02-16   11:10:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 40.

#44. To: rowdee (#40) (Edited)

UGH!

When I was no more than five I sustained multiple wasp stings and went to the hospital because I was delirious.

All I remember is my dear mother and the doctor making a little joke at how pitiful I looked, and I vaguely remember being in real trouble and not even feeling the needle the doctor used for the injection(s).

I remember the swarm and the stings, though. I tried to lean on an Azalea bush like a wall or something (hey, I was a kid and clowning I guess) and recalling that now is high trauma all over again.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2007-02-17 02:00:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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