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Author Topic: Honeybee problem nearing a 'critical point'  (Read 282 times)
martin
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« on: January 14, 2012, 12:08:47 AM »

Unusual honeybee die-offs have become so severe that some US beekeepers will qualify for disaster relief funds

from - http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jan/13/honeybee-problem-critical-point?intcmp=122

"Anyone who's been stung by a bee knows they can inflict an outsized pain for such tiny insects. It makes a strange kind of sense, then, that their demise would create an outsized problem for the food system by placing the more than 70 crops they pollinate -- from almonds to apples to blueberries -- in peril.

Although news about Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) has died down, commercial beekeepers have seen average population losses of about 30 percent each year since 2006, said Paul Towers, of the Pesticide Action Network. Towers was one of the organizers of a conference that brought together beekeepers and environmental groups this week to tackle the challenges facing the beekeeping industry and the agricultural economy by proxy.

"We are inching our way toward a critical tipping point," said Steve Ellis, secretary of the National Honey Bee Advisory Board (NHBAB) and a beekeeper for 35 years. Last year he had so many abnormal bee die-offs that he'll qualify for disaster relief from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

In addition to continued reports of CCD -- a still somewhat mysterious phenomenon in which entire bee colonies literally disappear, alien-abduction style, leaving not even their dead bodies behind -- bee populations are suffering poor health in general, and experiencing shorter life spans and diminished vitality. And while parasites, pathogens, and habitat loss can deal blows to bee health, research increasingly points to pesticides as the primary culprit.

"In the industry we believe pesticides play an important role in what's going on," said Dave Hackenberg, co-chair of the NHBAB and a beekeeper in Pennsylvania.

Of particular concern is a group of pesticides, chemically similar to nicotine, called neonicotinoids (neonics for short), and one in particular called clothianidin. Instead of being sprayed, neonics are
used to treat seeds, so that they're absorbed by the plant's vascular system, and then end up attacking the central nervous systems of bees that come to collect pollen. Virtually all of today's genetically engineered Bt corn is treated with neonics. The chemical industry alleges that bees don't like to collect corn pollen, but new research shows that not only do bees indeed forage in corn, but they also have multiple other routes of exposure to neonics.

The Purdue University study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, found high levels of clothianidin in planter exhaust spewed during the spring sowing of treated maize seed. It also found neonics in the soil of unplanted fields nearby those planted with Bt corn, on dandelions growing near those fields, in dead bees found near hive entrances, and in pollen stored in the hives.

Evidence already pointed to the presence of neonic-contaminated pollen
as a factor in CCD. As Hackenberg explained, "The insects start taking [the pesticide] home, and it contaminates everywhere the insect came from." These new revelations about the pervasiveness of neonics in bees' habitats only strengthen the case against using the insecticides.

The irony, of course, is that farmers use these chemicals to protect their crops from destructive insects, but in so doing, they harm other insects essential to their crops' production -- a catch-22 that Hackenberg said speaks to the fact that "we have become a nation driven by the chemical industry." In addition to beekeeping, he owns two farms, and even when crop analysts recommend spraying pesticides on his crops to kill an aphid population, for example, he knows that "if I spray, I'm going to kill all the beneficial insects." But most farmers, lacking Hackenberg's awareness of bee populations, follow the advice of the crop adviser -- who, these days, is likely to be paid by the chemical industry, rather than by a state university or another independent entity.

Beekeepers have already teamed up with groups representing the almond and blueberry industries -- both of which depend on honey bee pollination -- to tackle the need for education among farmers. "A lot of [farm groups] are recognizing that we need more resources devoted to pollinator protection," Ellis said. "We need that same level of commitment on a national basis, from our USDA and EPA and the agricultural chemical industry."

Unfortunately, it was the EPA itself that green-lit clothianidin and other neonics for commercial use, despite its own scientists' clear warnings about the chemicals' effects on bees and other pollinators. That doesn't bode well for the chances of getting neonics off the market now, even in light of the Purdue study's findings.

"The agency has, in most cases, sided with pesticide manufacturers and worked to fast-track the approval of new products, and failed in cases when there's clear evidence of harm to take those products off the market," Towers
said.

Since this is an election year -- a time when no one wants to make Big Ag (and its money) mad -- beekeepers may have to suffer another season of losses before there's any hope of action on the EPA's part. But when one out of every three bites of food on Americans' plates results directly from honey bee pollination, there's no question that the fate of these insects will determine
our own as eaters.

Ellis, for his part, thinks that figuring out a way to solve the bee crisis could be a catalyst for larger reform within our agriculture system. "If we can protect that pollinator base, it's going to have ripple effects ... for wildlife, for human health," he said. "It will bring up subjects that need to be looked at, of groundwater and surface water -- all the connected subjects associated [with] chemical use and agriculture."
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GavinA
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« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2012, 03:52:57 PM »

had a feeling the source of this problem would be GM related due to the timing of it.

This is exactly the sort of thing the anti-gm protest groups (of which I was a part) were protesting about in the 90s.

The proGM lot loved to paint us as being anti-science etc. but this just wasn't true. Fact of the matter was that the pro-GM companies were being anti-science because they were entirely ignoring everything that an entire branch of science told them would happen if they went ahead and did this - ie ecology, but because of their arrogance, the hi-tech nature of their work, and the clout of the companies they worked for the ecologists were ignored completely on this.

What we're seeing now is the largely inevitable impact of this.

I hope this link can be categorically proven, and the companies involved sued and given punative fines so big it forces them into bankruptcy. Couldn't happen to a bigger bunch of lying toerags if it did happen.
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« Reply #2 on: January 16, 2012, 07:38:52 PM »

Martin
very worrying. Even here in the UK bees are not doing well. Let's hope President Romney can sort this out in 2013  whistlie whistlie flyingpig
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« Reply #3 on: January 18, 2012, 05:17:12 PM »

"Vanishing of the Bees" Film is a good summary of the problem for those who like a documentary.

Available from "LoveFilm" (and no I am not on their pay.....it just works really well for us!)
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martin
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« Reply #4 on: January 18, 2012, 05:24:19 PM »

Agreed, brilliant film  -as for President Romney, sadly the US administration has a long history of being totally in the pockets of "Big Ag", and thanks to the pressure they are putting on Europe to accept GM, it looks like the present shower in power in the UK will usher it in (under the directions of Caroline "GM lobbyist" Spelman) - Paice has already torn up most legislation regarding pesticide usage............. facepalm
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