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.
Whats 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 Agricultures 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. Thats 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 theyre 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.