Chat Inbox Favourites Watching My comments

This topic was posted in the chat forum of the Ask TC group

Subject

Comments

Back to topics list

Subject
Ask TC - THE GLOBAL BEE CRISIS
serious business i'm tellin ya.

know anything about it??

beezwax.co.uk

"If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man"

This quote, which many claim is from Albert Einstein may not be far from the truth. Especially when one mouthful in every three that we eat is directly or indirectly affected by pollination from bees.

There are several reasons for the sharp decline in bee population worldwide, including GM crop practices, increased use of herbicides, radiation from mobile phones, the Varroa mite and the Africanised honey bee.

Often, bees simply don't make it home to the hive; either because they have lost their sense of direction or because they die before they make it home. This makes it difficult to find out what went wrong. Mass deaths frequently occur in just a week.

Not much importance has been placed on these problems until recent years but the decline is now so huge (the US have seen numbers fall by 60 or 70%) that we have to take notice. As we know, money talks in the US and bees generate a pretty penny - more than $14 billion per year according to the Cornell University in New York. A lot of this money comes from migratory pollination, where colonies of 15,000 - 30,000 bees are rented to farmers and shipped round the country on contracts to pollinate crops.

The phenomenon often called AIDS for bees is technically called CCD or Colony Collapse Disorder. It's called this because the hives are deserted when the bees vanish and the all important bee colonies simply fall apart.

Worrying, the few remaining bees are full of disease and the other bees and parasites that would usually raid the hives refuse to go anywhere near them. The assumption is that the colonies appear obviously toxic.


Click here for the en.wikipedia.org article on CCD

Here are a few comments from one specialist:-

"We are extremely alarmed," said Diana Cox-Foster, the professor of Entomology at Penn States University and one of the leading members of a specially convened colony-collapse disorder working group.

"It is one of the most alarming insect diseases ever to hit the US and it has the potential to devastate the US beekeeping industry. In some ways it may be to the insect world what foot-and-mouth disease was to livestock in England."

Professor Cox-Foster went on: "And another unusual symptom that we're are seeing, which makes this very different, is that normally when a bee colony gets weak and its numbers are decreasing, other neighbouring bees will come and steal the resources - they will take away the honey and the pollen.

"Other insects like to take advantage too, such as the wax moth or the hive beetle. But none of this is happening. These insects are not coming in.

"This suggests that there is something toxic in the colony itself which is repelling them."

So the real problem is CCD. The mobile phone radiation theory has been pretty much completely dismissed now and the Africanised honey bee problems have been investigated and understood. The Varroa mite problem is an interesting one. There is a direct connection between this and CCD as the Israeli acute paralysis virus (often transmitted by the Varroa mite) is found in almost all samples of bee colonies suffering from CCD. It is not the cause of CCD but it is connected and research is ongoing.

You know a little bit more about the current bee crisis now and hopefully you are asking "what can I do?"

Raising awareness is the most important thing you can do and a good start is just appreciating how serious the problem is and telling your friends. At the moment it is really only directly affecting the beekeepers who are struggling to keep up with the demand for pollination but soon it could affect everyone - awareness will be key if widespread action needs to be taken.

If you have a garden then you can be a little more hands on; and Phil Chandler, the author of The Barefoot Beekeeper has suggested 10 things you can do to help the endangered honey bee. You can find this advice in several places on the web but I recommend this article naturalchoices.co.uk

So that's it - be aware and help

SAVE THE BEES...................zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
Edited Sun 19 Apr
Israeli acute paralysis virus

I blame the zionists. :-P
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
oh bee have
Who laughed: Robin-ya-Moonshine
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
wo0
The user that posted this comment has been banned from DontStayIn. To view the message, click here at your own risk.

Who laughed: IainC
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
I saw a massive Bee today.
Who laughed: RobMarchant-DIG
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
Please tell me there's a punchline Steve-chubby-Broon
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
Nah, it was just a big Bee.
Who laughed: happysnappa, RobMarchant-DIG and wo0
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
"If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man"

not to mention that the honey industry would be fucked.
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 19 Apr
not to mention that the honey industry would be fucked.

exactly. and you need honeys more than most dude....
Reply Quote
Posted Mon 20 Apr
what would you rather be...





... or a wasp?
Reply Quote
Posted Mon 20 Apr
Save the bee's. Hear hear!
Reply Quote
Posted Mon 20 Apr
I've seen another 2 huge Bees today. Geordie Bees seem to be doing just fine. Im guessing theyre harder than those southern ponce Bee's.
I've seen another 2 huge Bees today. Geordie Bees seem to be doing just fine. Im guessing theyre harder than those southern ponce Bee's.

The northern Bees are just fatter, poorer and have stupid accents.
wo0 said:
It's ok, the planets aren't disappearing, they're just being moved. The Doctor will sort it out.
Who laughed: IainC

Just me and thee then Wo0.
Reply Quote
Posted Sun 03 May
news.bbc.co.uk
Reply Quote
Posted Mon 24 Aug
well I'll bee darned
Reply Quote
Posted Mon 24 Aug
shitburgers
Reply Quote
Posted Tue 25 Aug
Pesticides fingered in UK honeybee wipeout

"A new study appears to have confirmed suspicions that the neonicotinoid group of pesticides is in part responsible for the dramatic decline in UK honeybee numbers, the Telegraph reports.

Insect research charity Buglife and the Soil Association "brought together a number of peer-reviewed pieces of research" which demonstrate that neonicotinoids "damage the health and life cycle of bees over the long term by affecting the nervous system"."

theregister.co.uk
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 09 Sep
Pesticides blamed for killing bees

telegraph.co.uk
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 09 Sep
good find. thanks mate.....
Reply Quote
Posted Wed 09 Sep

Back to topics list

Post a reply

To post a comment you must first log on - use the links below to log on or create a free account.

Log in

If you've already signed-up

Sign up FREE!

If you've not used the site before

You can't post until you are logged in!

Don't Stay In mix of the week

Chat

Your browser looks like it's not compatible with our live chat box. We recommend FireFox.