Author Topic: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths  (Read 2185 times)

Balog

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Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« on: March 15, 2007, 01:55:44 PM »
http://www.greeleytrib.com/article/20070311/BUSINESS/103110103

 
Disappearing bees


Maria St. Louis-Sanchez,

A mysterious disease attacking honeybees around the nation is causing worry for local beekeepers and farmers.

The disease, called Colony Collapse Disorder, has caused the death of millions of bees around the nation and is believed to be one of the most widespread threats the beekeeping industry has ever faced. In Colorado , it has attacked several hives owned by commercial bee keepers.

"It ' s at epidemic proportions," said Jerry Cochran, manager of Colorado ' s apiary program.

As of yet, scientists have been unable to pinpoint the exact cause of the disorder. The main symptom is simply a missing colony. The bees are all gone, presumably dead, but are not in the vicinity of the hive. Also, pests that typically attack distressed colonies like wax moths or certain mites, stay away from these collapses hives for longer than usual.

"They are reluctant to go inside," Cochran said.

He said the disorder seems to be mostly affecting colonies that have undergone stress, such as transporting them around the U.S. for pollination jobs.

Still, some beekeepers are reporting that it happens even if the hives aren ' t transported.

Clark Sloan, owner of Clark ' s Honey Farm in Hudson , has had a few instances when he opens a hive and finds it empty.

"For us, it ' s not as bad as other reports we ' ve heard," he said. "But we ' ll go out to a colony sometimes and it ' s completely empty."

This is the latest crisis is another worry in an industry already plagued with threats such as mites, moths and pesticides.

"It ' s quite scary," he said. "You don ' t know if you can keep them alive for the next year. Each year it becomes more difficult."

The future of the bees isn ' t just important for the beekeepers.

Jacquie Monroe, who owns Monroe Organic Farms near La Salle says that the farm depends on bees. She lets Sloan set up hives at the farm and in turn, the bees help the crop.

"We definitely see a difference when there are bees or no bees on the farm," she said. "There is a lot more yield when there are bees on the farm."

She said that every farm needs bees, even if they don ' t keep hives close by like Monroe farm.

"Without bees you don ' t have a crop," she said.

Nina Rattle, who keeps bees as a hobby, had been worried about her bees this winter.

On Wednesday, Rattle checked her bees for the first time since winter set in. She was worried about her three hives as she covered herself in a suit to go and check on them.

"I hope it hasn ' t affected my hives, but I don ' t think there ' s anything I can do," she said.

Dead bees were piled around the hives -- but it was a normal amount for the winter she said. As soon as she lifted the top of the hive, hundreds of bees flew up and surrounded her, their buzzing growing in intensity as she checked section of the hives for eggs.

"It all looks healthy," she said as she closed up. "Thank goodness."

Jeff Johnston has also been able to dodge the disorder so far, but he lives in fear of it. He owns Colorado Honey Company in Fort Collins and has several hives. Though he sells honey, the real money in the bee business comes when he takes his hives to California to help pollinate the almond crop. These type of colonies that move around a lot are the most likely to be affected by the disorder.

"It might just be a step away for us," he said.

Still, if his bees aren ' t affected by the disorder, it might end up being good for business.

"If there are less hives in California , in theory it kind of makes our a little more valuable," he said. "But you don ' t want anyone going out of business for this."

Colony Collapse Disorder

Q What is Colony Collapse Disorder?

A Colony Collapse Disorder is the latest, and what seems to be the most serious die-off of honey bees colonies across the country. It is characterized by sudden colony death. It is also characterized by a slower than normal invasion by common pests such as wax moths and hive beetles.

Q What causes the disorder?

A It is not yet clear what is causing the die-off. At this point it seems likely that a number of factors may be involved.

Q Who is being impacted?

A As of February 2007, many of the beekeepers reporting heavy losses associated with the disorder are large commercial migratory beekeepers, some of who have lost 50 to 90 percent of their colonies. Surviving colonies are often so weak that they are not able to pollinate or produce honey.

Q Is honey from the colonies with the disorder safe to eat?

A. To date there is no evidence that the disorder affects honey. The impact of it appears to be limited to adult bees.

Source: Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium

How important are bees?

* Millions of acres of U.S. crops depend on insect pollination, including honey bees. A 1999 Cornell University study found that the direct value of honey bee pollination each year to U.S. agriculture is $14.6 billion. This is a 56.7 percent increase from $9.3 billion determined by the same study in 1989

* The almond crop is entirely dependent on honey bee pollination. To pollinate California ' s approximately 420,000 acres of almonds, it is estimated that it takes between 900,000 and 1,000,000 colonies of honey bees. Numerous other crops are 90 percent dependent on honey bee pollination. Some of those crops include apples, avocados, blueberries, cherries, cranberries and sunflowers. Other crops such as alfalfa, cucumbers, kiwi fruit, melons and vegetables are also pollinated by honey bees.
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Brad Johnson

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #1 on: March 15, 2007, 01:57:27 PM »
It's George Bush's fault.

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zahc

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #2 on: March 15, 2007, 02:01:21 PM »
It's obviously global warming.
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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #3 on: March 15, 2007, 02:58:45 PM »
You are both obviously rabid right-wing apologists, it is Haliburton's fault for causing Global Warming which cooks the bees in their hives.  It impacts female and minority bees harder.
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RocketMan

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #4 on: March 15, 2007, 03:35:19 PM »
You are both obviously rabid right-wing apologists, it is Haliburton's fault for causing Global Warming which cooks the bees in their hives.  It impacts female and minority bees harder.

Oh, good grief!  Now I suppose the bees will want reparations for the years of slavery they've been subjected to.  Can't they just get over it?  What's past is past.
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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #5 on: March 15, 2007, 04:23:42 PM »
Obviously it's time for government to step in and salvage the situation. 

I recommend we formalize the status of the recent influx of newer, stronger honeybee species that migrated here, undocumented, over the Southern border.  Heck, it would be a Cinderella story as they were originally stolen from the bosom of their homeland of Africa to labor in the Americas by exploitative Westerners in the first place.

And, after all, they are just making the honey that our spoiled and sickly domestic bees are unwilling to make.

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CAnnoneer

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #6 on: March 16, 2007, 10:02:42 AM »
First, sickness of coacoa trees, now honeybees disappearing. Obviously, bioterrorists are trying to crush my spirit by sweet-treats deprivation! Honey and chocolate are power!

On a more serious note, have all the bees left, or just the workers? Is it possible that some byproduct of agricultural chemicals inhibited chemical signalling among the hive members?

K Frame

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #7 on: March 16, 2007, 10:05:29 AM »
Poor things.

They lost faith in the dollar...
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Manedwolf

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #8 on: March 16, 2007, 10:30:12 AM »
First, sickness of coacoa trees, now honeybees disappearing. Obviously, bioterrorists are trying to crush my spirit by sweet-treats deprivation! Honey and chocolate are power!

On a more serious note, have all the bees left, or just the workers? Is it possible that some byproduct of agricultural chemicals inhibited chemical signalling among the hive members?

On that serious note, if there were a massive bee die-off, we'd all be a lot hungrier. Soooooo many of our crops are dependent on pollinating insects...

StopTheGrays

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #9 on: March 16, 2007, 10:35:06 AM »
This is old news. Anyone who listens to Coast to Coast AM knew about this over a year ago. This and the fact the Free Masons are controlled by lizard people from the earth's core.
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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #10 on: March 16, 2007, 10:38:33 AM »
At first you might not notice the effects, but beefore you know it, you will feel the sting of having no honey, no matter how hard you comb through the aisles at the grocery store.  In no time the buzz around the water cooler will bee that honey's value has waxed beyond gold.  Eventually, a few forward-thinking Austrian-Mexican economists will find a way to back a new currency using honey, and they will keep stocks of it on hand for exchanging for paper.  Some will complain it is all smoke and mirrors and that the system is full of holes, but true beelievers will know how strong the Beeso really is.

crt360

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #11 on: March 16, 2007, 10:48:04 AM »

I recommend we formalize the status of the recent influx of newer, stronger honeybee species that migrated here, undocumented, over the Southern border.  Heck, it would be a Cinderella story as they were originally stolen from the bosom of their homeland of Africa to labor in the Americas by exploitative Westerners in the first place.

And, after all, they are just making the honey that our spoiled and sickly domestic bees are unwilling to make.



F*** that!  grin Those illegal bees are nothing but a bunch of criminal-minded thugs.  They are a big problem for the domestic honey bee industry.  They corrupt domestic colonies and supposedly are not very good for making honey.  They also chase you around and sting the crap out of you.  I had to rescue my dog from a swarm that attacked him.  He was stung hundreds of times and after a few days with the vet he barely survived.  I was chased and stung by some just a year or two ago.  When I was a kid and all local bees were mild-mannered honeybees, I had no problem with them, but these new mean ass immigrant bees are no fun.  I'm ready for some genetically modified non-stinging bees.  I've read that the colony collapse disorder was a problem as far back as the late 1700s, so I don't think it's going to be a result of modern pesticides.  Maybe it's caused by aflatoxin in the plants they are pollinating.
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cordex

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #12 on: March 16, 2007, 10:53:58 AM »
Quote
They also chase you around and sting the crap out of you.
They're just stinging the people that American bees won't.

K Frame

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #13 on: March 16, 2007, 11:17:38 AM »
Maybee it's actually a governmental program to prevent people from doing this...

From Yahoo's "Oddly Enough" news...

"ALMATY (Reuters) - Border guards in Kazakhstan have arrested a man for trying to smuggle a home-made grenade in a pot of honey, local media reported on Friday.

The man, a Russian citizen, was traveling by train from the Russian town of Omsk.

"The pot seemed too heavy so it had to be checked," a senior Kazakh border official told the Kazakhstan Today news agency.

The man told police he did not know it was a grenade and that his wife had given it to him as a present for her relatives in Kazakhstan."
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Matthew Carberry

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #14 on: March 16, 2007, 01:20:09 PM »
Did she not like the relatives or did she not like the husband?

Either way, somebodies getting a beating.
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Manedwolf

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #15 on: March 16, 2007, 11:06:17 PM »
Maybee it's actually a governmental program to prevent people from doing this...

From Yahoo's "Oddly Enough" news...

"ALMATY (Reuters) - Border guards in Kazakhstan have arrested a man for trying to smuggle a home-made grenade in a pot of honey, local media reported on Friday.

The man, a Russian citizen, was traveling by train from the Russian town of Omsk.

"The pot seemed too heavy so it had to be checked," a senior Kazakh border official told the Kazakhstan Today news agency.

The man told police he did not know it was a grenade and that his wife had given it to him as a present for her relatives in Kazakhstan."


They apparently had childhood issues with Winnie the Pooh?

Matthew Carberry

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Re: Scientists baffled by epidemic bee deaths
« Reply #16 on: March 17, 2007, 05:59:21 AM »
However you read it, it's a sticky situation.
"Not all unwise laws are unconstitutional laws, even where constitutional rights are potentially involved." - Eugene Volokh

"As for affecting your movement, your Rascal should be able to achieve the the same speeds no matter what holster rig you are wearing."