Washington – Feds: Many Causes For Dramatic Bee Disappearance

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    In this April 25, 2007 file photo, Jeffery Pettis, a top bee scientist at the Agriculture Department's Bee Research Laboratory, talks about his work with honeybees, in Beltsville, Md. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File)Washington – A new federal report blames a combination of problems for a mysterious and dramatic disappearance of U.S. honeybees since 2006.

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    The intertwined factors cited include a parasitic mite, multiple viruses, bacteria, poor nutrition, genetics, habitat loss and pesticides.

    The multiple causes make it harder to do something about what’s called colony collapse disorder, experts say. The disorder has caused as much as one-third of the nation’s bees to just disappear each winter since 2006.

    Bees, especially honeybees, are needed to pollinate crops.

    The federal report, issued Thursday by the Agriculture Department and the Environmental Protection Agency, said the biggest culprit is the parasitic mite varroa destructor, calling it “the single most detrimental pest of honeybees.”

    The problem has also hit bee colonies in Europe, where regulators are considering a ban on a type of pesticides that some environmental groups blame for the bee collapse. The U.S. report cites pesticides, but near the bottom of the list of factors. And federal officials and researchers advising them said the science doesn’t justify a ban of the pesticides yet.

    The report is the result of a large conference of scientists that the government brought together last year to figure out what’s going on. Participant May Berenbaum, a top bee researcher from the University of Illinois, said the class of chemicals known as neonicotinoids hasn’t been proven to be the sole culprit in the bee loss.

    In an interview, she said she was “extremely dubious” that banning the chemical would have any effect on bee health. She was the chairwoman of a major National Academy of Sciences study on the loss of pollinators.

    Dave Gaulson of the University of Stirling in Scotland, who conducted a study last year that implicated the chemical, said he can’t disagree with the overall conclusions of the U.S. government report. However, he said it could have emphasized pesticides more.

    Pollinators, like honeybees, are crucial to the U.S. food supply. About $30 billion a year in agriculture depends on their health, said the USDA’s Sonny Ramaswamy.

    USDA bee researcher Jeff Pettis said modern farming practices that often leave little forage area for bees is a big problem.

    At a news conference Thursday with federal officials, Berenbaum said there’s no single solution to the bee problem: “We’re not really well equipped or even used to fighting on multiple fronts.”


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    8 Comments
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    Texas_Eli
    Texas_Eli
    10 years ago

    It’s the GMOs, countries that ban GMOs didn’t have the problem…

    toolee
    toolee
    10 years ago

    What a bunch of dummies, the reason is so simple.
    IT JUST WASN’T MEANT TO “BEE”

    ShmutzVesh
    ShmutzVesh
    10 years ago

    They should take the bees off ObamaCare! Then they would at least have a chance at survival!!

    MarkTwain2
    MarkTwain2
    10 years ago

    All they need to do to fix this is set up some sukkahs on mass scale.

    posaikacharon
    posaikacharon
    10 years ago

    A bee m’lebt

    leahle
    leahle
    10 years ago

    Joking aside (we’re Jews and can’t help it) I hope everyone realizes how serious this is. Our agricultural policy (which most of us never have to deal with because we are generally urban) is leading us on a catastrophic path. Instead of small diversified farms that use different heirloom seeds, we now have gigantic agri-farms that grow single crops using one type of seed. We use a lot of pesticides, which breeds resistant weeks, so we genetically modified the seeds to be resistant to pesticide. The genes then escape to the wild to make more resistant weeds. Large companies like Monsanto own patents to the seeds and won’t even let farmers save seeds from their crops for the next year’s plantings. Growing single varieties means that pest problems are magnified. This entire combination of things is contributing to mass bee deaths, which means there will be much less (and much more expensive) food. This is one of the biggest problems we face and few people even think about it. Enough ranting for today – gut Shabbos!