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  • Honeybee problems are our problems

    The mysterious deaths of the honeybees
    Honeybee colony collapse drives price of honey higher and threatens fruit and vegetable production.
    By CNN's Amy Sahba
    March 29 2007: 5:28 PM EDT


    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Beekeepers throughout the United States have been losing between 50 and 90 percent of their honeybees over the past six months, perplexing scientists, driving honey prices higher and threatening fruit and vegetable production.

    At a House Agricultural Subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C., today, members of various organizations came together to share their concerns about what they have been calling the "Colony Collapse Disorder," or CCD.


    Honeybees have been mysteriously dying across the United States, sending honey prices higher and threatening the agriculture industry.
    Beginning in October 2006, beekeepers from 24 states reported that hundreds of thousands of their bees were dying and their colonies were being devastated.

    In December 2006, beekeepers' associations, scientists and officials formed the CCD working group, in hopes of identifying the cause and solving the problem of CCD.

    Most of the beekeepers who have recently reported heavy losses associated with CCD are large commercial migratory beekeepers, some of whom are losing 50 percent to 90 percent of their colonies.

    The great corn gold rush
    Moreover, surviving colonies are often so weak that they are not viable pollinating or honey-producing units. Losses have been reported in migratory operations in California, Florida, Oklahoma and Texas, but in February some larger keepers of nonmigratory bees, particularly from the mid-Atlantic region and the Pacific Northwest reported significant losses of more than 50 percent.

    Testifying in front of the committee this morning, Caird E. Rexroad, from the Agricultural Research Service, said that although his agency has a variety of theories as to what might be causing CCD, it believes stress on the bees might be the major motive.

    "We believe that some form of stress may be suppressing immune systems of bees, ultimately contributing to CCD." The main four types of stresses that Rexroad identified were migratory stresses, mites, pathogens and pesticides.

    According to the National Agricultural Statistic Service, honey production declined by 11 percent in 2006, and honey prices per pound increased 14 percent, from 91.8 cents in 2005 to 104.2 cents in 2006. Daren Jantzy, with the National Agricultural Statistics Service, told CNN that these statistics are based on numbers collected mostly before the true impact of CCD was noted. Its effect will be more noticeable when the 2007 statistics are collected.

    And the impact goes far beyond direct bee products like honey and wax. Three-quarters of the world's 250,000 flowering plants - including many fruits and vegetables - require pollination to reproduce.

    Dr. May R. Berenbaum, head of the department of entomology at the University of Illinois, believes the economic impact of the decline in bees could be disastrous.

    "Though economists differ in calculating the exact dollar value of honeybee pollination, virtually all estimates range in the billions of dollars," she told representatives at the House hearing.

    But this is not a new problem. Over the past two decades, concern has risen around the world about the decline of pollinators of all descriptions. During this period in the United States, the honeybee, the world's premier pollinator, experienced a dramatic 40 percent decline, from nearly six million to less than two and a half million.

    In 2005, for the first time in 85 years, the United States was forced to import honeybees in order to meet its pollination demands. Berenbaum says that "if honeybees numbers continued to decline at the rates documented from 1989 to 1996, managed honeybees ... will cease to exist in the United States by 2035."

  • #2
    There are lots of different theories out, on what's killing the honey bees. One of them is Electromagnetic Signals .........

    Millions of Bees Die - Are Electromagnetic Signals To Blame? - Health Supreme
    Angela

    If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.

    BTW, I'm still keeping track of how many times you annoy me.

    Comment


    • #3
      Scary...indeed one third of all US diet depend on pollination and most of that is performed by bees.A research "week" on the subject is planned for Washington in late June.
      Lets see....
      G

      Comment


      • #4
        When I first heard about this I thought it must be a joke or being overstated... I spent some time looking and this seems to be a very serious problem.

        I can live without Honey but the impact on plants has the potential to be a huge problem.

        Comment


        • #5
          i saw this on CNBC when they first aired the news about 2 weeks ago. It is a big problem.
          Timeshareforums Shirts and Mugs on sale now! http://www.cafepress.com/ts4ms

          Comment


          • #6
            I'm worried as well, for I've had miserable results in growing peppers the past couple of years and I hardly see a honey bee around. I was a bit relieved yesterday when I saw what might have been one in the garden.

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            • #7
              I used to be a bee keeper till I develop an allergic reaction to the bee stings and had to quit. It was a lot of fun, but hard work. Had plenty of honey and so did the neighbors and relatives. I had two hives and we had all kinds of bees, but now I hardly see any honey bees in the garden or yard.

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              • #8
                A local beekeeper in Northern AZ used to have the most marvelous honey, and his sales were enormous. About five years ago, you couldn't find any of his product, and we went to his wife's cafe where you could always find the jars. We asked what happened. She replied that the bees got mites and the honey was not possible anymore. He tried to save the colony but to no avail...it really hurt him to have to throw in the towel.

                If any of you love honey, do be sure to buy some of the Arizona Desert Wildflower honey when you come to visit....it is fabulous!

                We couldn't live without honey! While we don't eat lots of it, it is a very handy thing to have medicinally, as if you eat the honey of the area in which you live it does help build immune system, and fight off allergies...at least that is our experience.

                Even just a quick 1/4 teaspoon of it melting on your tongue just can revive you from your blues....it is better than ice cream!
                Life is short, live it with this awareness.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Honeybee die-off threatens food supply

                  Honeybee die-off threatens food supply By SETH BORENSTEIN, AP Science Writer, Wed May 2, 10:49 PM ET



                  BELTSVILLE, Md. - Unless someone or something stops it soon, the mysterious killer that is wiping out many of the nation's honeybees could have a devastating effect on America's dinner plate, perhaps even reducing us to a glorified bread-and-water diet.

                  Honeybees don't just make honey; they pollinate more than 90 of the tastiest flowering crops we have. Among them: apples, nuts, avocados, soybeans, asparagus, broccoli, celery, squash and cucumbers. And lots of the really sweet and tart stuff, too, including citrus fruit, peaches, kiwi, cherries, blueberries, cranberries, strawberries, cantaloupe and other melons.

                  In fact, about one-third of the human diet comes from insect-pollinated plants, and the honeybee is responsible for 80 percent of that pollination, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

                  Even cattle, which feed on alfalfa, depend on bees. So if the collapse worsens, we could end up being "stuck with grains and water," said Kevin Hackett, the national program leader for USDA's bee and pollination program.

                  "This is the biggest general threat to our food supply," Hackett said.

                  While not all scientists foresee a food crisis, noting that large-scale bee die-offs have happened before, this one seems particularly baffling and alarming.

                  U.S. beekeepers in the past few months have lost one-quarter of their colonies — or about five times the normal winter losses — because of what scientists have dubbed Colony Collapse Disorder. The problem started in November and seems to have spread to 27 states, with similar collapses reported in Brazil, Canada and parts of Europe.

                  Scientists are struggling to figure out what is killing the honeybees, and early results of a key study this week point to some kind of disease or parasite.

                  Even before this disorder struck, America's honeybees were in trouble. Their numbers were steadily shrinking, because their genes do not equip them to fight poisons and disease very well, and because their gregarious nature exposes them to ailments that afflict thousands of their close cousins.

                  "Quite frankly, the question is whether the bees can weather this perfect storm," Hackett said. "Do they have the resilience to bounce back? We'll know probably by the end of the summer."

                  Experts from Brazil and Europe have joined in the detective work at USDA's bee lab in suburban Washington. In recent weeks, Hackett briefed Vice President Cheney's office on the problem. Congress has held hearings on the matter.

                  "This crisis threatens to wipe out production of crops dependent on bees for pollination," Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns said in a statement.

                  A congressional study said honeybees add about $15 billion a year in value to our food supply.

                  Of the 17,000 species of bees that scientists know about, "honeybees are, for many reasons, the pollinator of choice for most North American crops," a National Academy of Sciences study said last year. They pollinate many types of plants, repeatedly visit the same plant, and recruit other honeybees to visit, too.

                  Pulitzer Prize-winning insect biologist E.O. Wilson of Harvard said the honeybee is nature's "workhorse — and we took it for granted."

                  "We've hung our own future on a thread," Wilson, author of the book "The Creation: An Appeal to Save Life on Earth," told The Associated Press on Monday.

                  Beginning this past fall, beekeepers would open up their hives and find no workers, just newborn bees and the queen. Unlike past bee die-offs, where dead bees would be found near the hive, this time they just disappeared. The die-off takes just one to three weeks.

                  USDA's top bee scientist, Jeff Pettis, who is coordinating the detective work on this die-off, has more suspected causes than time, people and money to look into them.

                  The top suspects are a parasite, an unknown virus, some kind of bacteria, pesticides, or a one-two combination of the top four, with one weakening the honeybee and the second killing it.

                  A quick experiment with some of the devastated hives makes pesticides seem less likely. In the recent experiment, Pettis and colleagues irradiated some hard-hit hives and reintroduced new bee colonies. More bees thrived in the irradiated hives than in the non-irradiated ones, pointing toward some kind of disease or parasite that was killed by radiation.

                  The parasite hypothesis has history and some new findings to give it a boost: A mite practically wiped out the wild honeybee in the U.S. in the 1990s. And another new one-celled parasitic fungus was found last week in a tiny sample of dead bees by University of California San Francisco molecular biologist Joe DeRisi, who isolated the human SARS virus.

                  However, Pettis and others said while the parasite nosema ceranae may be a factor, it cannot be the sole cause. The fungus has been seen before, sometimes in colonies that were healthy.

                  Recently, scientists have begun to wonder if mankind is too dependent on honeybees. The scientific warning signs came in two reports last October.

                  First, the National Academy of Sciences said pollinators, especially America's honeybee, were under threat of collapse because of a variety of factors. Captive colonies in the United States shrank from 5.9 million in 1947 to 2.4 million in 2005.

                  Then, scientists finished mapping the honeybee genome and found that the insect did not have the normal complement of genes that take poisons out of their systems or many immune-disease-fighting genes. A fruitfly or a mosquito has twice the number of genes to fight toxins, University of Illinois entomologist May Berenbaum.

                  What the genome mapping revealed was "that honeybees may be peculiarly vulnerable to disease and toxins," Berenbaum said.

                  University of Montana bee expert Jerry Bromenshenk has surveyed more than 500 beekeepers and found that 38 percent of them had losses of 75 percent or more. A few weeks back, Bromenshenk was visiting California beekeepers and saw a hive that was thriving. Two days later, it had completely collapsed.

                  Yet Bromenshenk said, "I'm not ready to panic yet." He said he doesn't think a food crisis is looming.

                  Even though experts this year gave what's happening a new name and think this is a new type of die-off, it may have happened before.

                  Bromenshenk said cited die-offs in the 1960s and 1970s that sound somewhat the same. There were reports of something like this in the United States in spots in 2004, Pettis said. And Germany had something similar in 2004, said Peter Neumann, co-chairman of a 17-country European research group studying the problem.

                  "The problem is that everyone wants a simple answer," Pettis said. "And it may not be a simple answer."

                  ___

                  On the Net:

                  Colony Collapse Disorder Web page by the Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium:

                  MAAREC - Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    The problem isn't restricted to North America. Similar reports are on the news programmes in the UK as well.
                    The Doomsday scenario says that, because of the knock on effects on pollination if bees were totally wiped out, within about 8 years there would be widespread problems with at best malnourishment and at worst starvation.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Has the Mystery been solved?

                      Has Mystery of Bee Deaths Been Solved? - AOL News

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        A Heavy Toll On Honey Bees

                        A new survey had grim news about honey bees: Slightly more a third of the nation's commercially managed hives died in the past year. It's the second consecutive year of "substantial" losses of bees, said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, president of the Apiary Inspectors of America. His group commissioned the study.

                        A Third of Honey Bee Hives Lost in 2007
                        By JULIANA BARBASSA,AP
                        The Associated Press




                        SAN FRANCISCO (May 6) - A survey of bee health released Tuesday revealed a grim picture, with 36.1 percent of the nation's commercially managed hives lost since last year.

                        Last year's survey commissioned by the Apiary Inspectors of America found losses of about 32 percent.

                        As beekeepers travel with their hives this spring to pollinate crops around the country, it's clear the insects are buckling under the weight of new diseases, pesticide drift and old enemies like the parasitic varroa mite, said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, president of the group.

                        This is the second year the association has measured colony deaths across the country. This means there aren't enough numbers to show a trend, but clearly bees are dying at unsustainable levels and the situation is not improving, said vanEngelsdorp, also a bee expert with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.

                        "For two years in a row, we've sustained a substantial loss," he said. "That's an astonishing number. Imagine if one out of every three cows, or one out of every three chickens, were dying. That would raise a lot of alarm."

                        The survey included 327 operators who account for 19 percent of the country's approximately 2.44 million commercially managed bee hives. The data is being prepared for submission to a journal.

                        About 29 percent of the deaths were due to Colony Collapse Disorder, a mysterious disease that causes adult bees to abandon their hives. Beekeepers who saw CCD in their hives were much more likely to have major losses than those who didn't.

                        "What's frightening about CCD is that it's not predictable or understood," vanEngelsdorp said.

                        On Tuesday, Pennsylvania's Agriculture Secretary Dennis Wolff announced that the state would pour an additional $20,400 into research at Pennsylvania State University looking for the causes of CCD. This raises emergency funds dedicated to investigating the disease to $86,000.

                        The issue also has attracted federal grants and funding from companies that depend on honey bees, including ice-cream maker Haagen-Dazs.

                        Because the berries, fruits and nuts that give about 28 of Haagen-Daazs' varieties flavor depend on honey bees for pollination, the company is donating up to $250,000 to CCD and sustainable pollination research at Penn State and the University of California, Davis.

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                        • #13
                          I have only seen a few honey bees over the last 3-4 years here. It's a shame; I can remember when we had many of them all over my flowers...

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                          • #14
                            I am planting my third apple tree to hopefully get apples on the trees. More trees, more pollination chances. I will also be putting in some good bee attracting flowers, anything to try to attract bees and get my trees pollinated. This is just for me, not to raise a cash crop. Just because I want apples. It could be a real struggle for anyone who needs the bees to make a living.
                            Don

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                            • #15
                              I honestly think cell towers are responsible for weaking the bees then other things like parasites, fungus, or bacterial disease take over. I think this may also be the cause of many of the weird diseases and cancer man has today.

                              Wow I am saying this and I am actually right of Rush Limbaugh on most issues, however I actually believe this has merit. There is a homeopath out of the UK that publishes a newsletter Zeus that has a lot of info among other places. And check out The Safe Wireless Initiative > Home Cell may be a big contributing factor to autism also.

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