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Everything you didn't want to know about Colony Collapse Disorder

It sounds like the start of a Kurt Vonnegut novel:

Nobody worried all that much about the loss of a few animal species here and there until one day the bees came to their senses and decided to quit producing an unnaturally large surplus of honey for our benefit. One by one, they went on strike and flew off to parts unknown.

Among the various mythologies of the apocalypse, fear of insect plagues has always loomed larger than fear of species loss. But this may change, as a strange new plague is wiping out our honey bees one hive at a time. It has been named Colony Collapse Disorder, or CCD, by the apiculturalists and apiarists who are scrambling to understand and hopefully stop it. First reported last autumn in the U.S., the list of afflicted countries has now expanded to include several in Europe, as well as Brazil, Taiwan, and possibly Canada. (1)(24)(29)

Apparently unknown before this year, CCD is said to follow a unique pattern with several strange characteristics. Bees seem to desert their hive or forget to return home from their foraging runs. The hive population dwindles and then collapses once there are too few bees to maintain it. Typically, no dead bee carcasses lie in or around the afflicted hive, although the queen and a few attendants may remain.

The defect, whatever it is, afflicts the adult bee. Larvae continue to develop normally, even as a hive is in the midst of collapse. Stricken colonies may appear normal, as seen from the outside, but when beekeepers look inside the hive box, they find a small number of mature bees caring for a large number of younger and developing bees that remain. Normally, only the oldest bees go out foraging for nectar and pollen, while younger workers act as nurse bees caring for the larvae and cleaning the comb. A healthy hive in mid-summer has between 40,000 and 80,000 bees.

Perhaps the most ominous thing about CCD, and one of its most distinguishing characteristics, is that bees and other animals living nearby refrain from raiding the honey and pollen stored away in the dead hive. In previously observed cases of hive collapse (and it is certainly not a rare occurrence) these energy stores are quickly stolen. But with CCD the invasion of hive pests such as the wax moth and small hive beetle is noticeably delayed. (2)

Among the possible culprits behind CCD are: a fungus, a virus, a bacterium, a pesticide (or combination of pesticides), GMO crops bearing pesticide genes, erratic weather, or even cell phone radiation. “The odds are some neurotoxin is what’s causing it,” said David VanderDussen, a Canadian beekeeper who recently won an award for developing an environmentally friendly mite repellent. Then again, according to Dennis vanEngelsdorp, the top bee specialist with the Pennsylvania State Department of Agriculture, “We are pretty sure, but not certain, that it is a contagious disease.” Their comments notwithstanding, most scientists are unwilling to say they understand the problem beyond describing its outward appearance. Perhaps a government or UN task force would be a good idea right about now. (3)(25)

According to an FAQ published on March 9, 2007 by the Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group based primarily at Penn State University, the first report of CCD was made in mid-November 2006 by Dave Hackenberg, a Pennsylvania beekeeper overwintering his 2900 hives in Florida. Only 1000 survived. Soon other migratory beekeepers reported similar heavy losses. Subsequent reports from beekeepers painted a picture of a marked increase in die-offs, which led to the present concern among bee experts. (2)

The name CCD was invented by vanEngelsdorp and his colleagues at Penn State. It reflects their somewhat medical view of the situation. The BBC suggested in a sub-headline to a story on CCD that the problem would be more aptly named the “vanishing bee syndrome.” This proposal may have merit, considering how mass opinion polls influence policy these days. (4)
News of the CCD problem hit all of the major media networks in February 2006. A widely run Associated Press story said reports of unusual colony deaths have come in from at least 22 states, and that some commercial beekeepers reported losing more than half of their bees. The same story informed that autopsies of CCD bees showed higher than normal levels of fungi, bacteria and other pathogens, as well as weakened immune systems. It appears as if the bees have got the equivalent of AIDS. (5)

An April 15, 2007 story in The Independent reported that the west coast of the U.S. may have lost 60% of its commercial bee population, with an even greater 70% loss on the east coast. The same story said that one of London’s biggest bee-keepers recently reported 23 of his 40 hives empty. But, the U.K. Department of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs was quoted as saying, “There is absolutely no evidence of CCD in the UK.” (6)

One must wonder where the truth lies considering the level of sensationalism prevalent in the British press. Case in point, this same story (among several others, to be fair) attributes a juicy but dubious quote to Einstein: “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left.” (6)(7)

Einstein, in all likelihood, never said that, but if he did, it is a justifiable exaggeration. Bees certainly are important, and it will get ugly if we lose them. “It’s not the staples,” said Jeff Pettis of the U.S. Agricultural Research Service. “If you can imagine eating a bowl of oatmeal every day with no fruit on it, that’s what it would be like” without honeybee pollination. (8)

The beekeeping industry underpins the American agricultural industry to the tune of $US 15 billion or more. The picture is similar in many countries, especially in the West. Honey bees are used commercially to pollinate about one third of crop species in the U.S. This includes almonds, broccoli, peaches, soybeans, apples, pears, cherries, raspberries, blackberries, cranberries, and strawberries. Other insects, including other kinds of bees, may be used to pollinate some of these crops, but only bees are reliable on a commercial scale. If the bees go, we will see a change for the worse at our local supermarkets. (1)

Of course everyone is hoping for a quick solution to appear, and tantalizing reports have emerged. Recent military research at Edgewood Chemical Biological Center claims to have narrowed the likely cause of CCD to a virus, a micro-parasite or both. This work used a new technology called the Integrated Virus Detection System (IVDS), which can rapidly screen samples for pathogens.

These virus laden samples were sent to UC San Francisco, where a suspicious fungus was also discovered in them, suggesting the possibility that the fungus is either an immunosuppressive factor or the fatal pathogen that kills the bees. These “highly preliminary” findings were announced in an April 25, 2007 Los Angeles Times story with the headline, “Experts may have found what’s bugging the bees.” The story called it “the first solid evidence pointing to a potential cause,” and even noted that “there is reason to believe this fungus can be controlled by the antibiotic fumagillin.” (10) (25)

One wonders why the trade name of a pesticide made it into such a story, but the presence of pathogens in bees should come as no surprise to anyone who has been keeping up to date on bee health. Nearly all beekeepers use a variety of chemical and pesticide treatments on their hive boxes out of sheer necessity. A pantheon of mites, fungi and microbes prey on bees. These pests are predictably developing resistance to the chemical treatments we use to fight them. If the new IVDS results are conclusive and lead to a silver bullet solution, that will be wonderful, but such a simple model of CCD is unlikely to be the real key to saving our prime pollinators. (9)

It is worth noting that, while CCD has been presented to the media as a sudden new problem, these same theories about causative infections have already been presented to explain previous bee die-offs, especially those in the spring of 2005, which were attributed to the now infamous varroa mite, a.k.a. “vampire mite,” which began infecting American honey bees in 1987. (31)

About the size of a pinhead, and with eight legs, it feeds on the blood of adult bees like a tick, and even worse, it also eats the bee larvae. Varroa is the bane of beekeepers everywhere except China, where it originated, and the honey bees have local resistance. In a case of sadly ironic timing, Hawaii just reported its first case of varroa a few weeks ago. (26)

LiveScience senior writer, Robert Roy Britt wrote in a May, 2005 story about the mite: “Up to 60 percent of hives in some regions have been wiped out. Entire colonies can collapse within two weeks of being infested. North Carolina fears it is on the verge of an agricultural crisis. No state is immune.” (11)

A Science Daily story dated May 18, 2005, and sourced to Penn State, purported to explain why varroa was so bad. Entitled, “Bee Mites Suppress Bee Immunity, Open Door for Viruses and Bacteria,” it explained research into levels of ‘deformed wing virus,’ a mutagenic pathogen that is believed to persist in bee populations because it makes guard bees more aggressive. Bees of a given hive normally carry low levels of this virus, but the Penn State researchers found that virus levels shot sky high during secondary infections if, and only if, the bees also had varroa mites. It should be clear why the varroa mite is on everyone’s list of things to examine in the fight against CCD. (12)

Another perspective

Sharon Labchuk is a longtime environmental activist and part-time organic beekeeper from Prince Edward Island. She has twice run for a seat in Ottawa’s House of Commons, making strong showings around 5% for Canada’s fledgling Green Party. She is also leader of the provincial wing of her party. In a widely circulated email, she wrote:

I’m on an organic beekeeping list of about 1,000 people, mostly Americans, and no one in the organic beekeeping world, including commercial beekeepers, is reporting colony collapse on this list. The problem with the big commercial guys is that they put pesticides in their hives to fumigate for varroa mites, and they feed antibiotics to the bees. They also haul the hives by truck all over the place to make more money with pollination services, which stresses the colonies. (13)

Her email recommends a visit to the Bush Bees Web site at bushfarms.com. Here, Michael Bush felt compelled to put a message to the beekeeping world right on the top page:

Most of us beekeepers are fighting with the Varroa mites. I’m happy to say my biggest problems are things like trying to get nucs through the winter and coming up with hives that won’t hurt my back from lifting or better ways to feed the bees.

This change from fighting the mites is mostly because I’ve gone to natural sized cells. In case you weren’t aware, and I wasn’t for a long time, the foundation in common usage results in much larger bees than what you would find in a natural hive. I’ve measured sections of natural worker brood comb that are 4.6mm in diameter. …What most people use for worker brood is foundation that is 5.4mm in diameter. If you translate that into three dimensions instead of one, it produces a bee that is about half as large again as is natural. By letting the bees build natural sized cells, I have virtually eliminated my Varroa and Tracheal mite problems. One cause of this is shorter capping times by one day, and shorter post-capping times by one day. This means less Varroa get into the cells, and less Varroa reproduce in the cells. (14)

Who should be surprised that the major media reports forget to tell us that the dying bees are actually hyper-bred varieties that we coax into a larger than normal body size? It sounds just like the beef industry. And, have we here a solution to the vanishing bee problem? Is it one that the CCD Working Group, or indeed, the scientific world at large, will support? Will media coverage affect government action in dealing with this issue?

These are important questions to ask. It is not an uncommonly held opinion that, although this new pattern of bee colony collapse seems to have struck from out of the blue (which suggests a triggering agent), it is likely that some biological limit in the bees has been crossed. There is no shortage of evidence that we have been fast approaching this limit for some time.

“We’ve been pushing them too hard,” Dr. Peter Kevan, an associate professor of environmental biology at the University of Guelph in Ontario, told the CBC. “And we’re starving them out by feeding them artificially and moving them great distances.” Given the stress commercial bees are under, Kevan suggests CCD might be caused by parasitic mites, or long cold winters, or long wet springs, or pesticides, or genetically modified crops. Maybe it’s all of the above. (24)

This conclusion is not surprising, considering how the practice of beekeeping has been made ultra-efficient in a competitive world run by free market forces. Unlike many crops, honey is not given subsidy protection in the United States despite the huge importance of the bee industry to food production. The FDA has hardly moved at all to protect American producers from “honey pretenders” – products containing little or no honey that are imported and sold with misleading packaging. Rare is the beekeeper that does not need pesticide treatments and other techniques falling under the rubric of ‘factory farming.’ (15)

You might be justifiably stunned to know how little money is being thrown at this problem. A January 29, 2007 Penn State press release (just before CCD hit the big networks) stated: “The beekeeping industry has been quick to respond to the crisis. The National Honey Board has pledged $13,000 of emergency funding to the CCD working group. Other organizations, such as the Florida State Beekeepers Association, are working with their membership to commit additional funds.” A quick look at CostofWar.com will tell you that that $13,000 buys about 4 seconds of war at the going rate. Remember, these same scientists had presented the world with a similar threat level two years ago. Apparently they were ignored. (16)

Anyway, breathe easy; Congress has begun talking up the concept of getting involved. On April 26, the Senate Agriculture Committee, perhaps not trusting CNN, heard from representatives of the beekeeping industry just how important a matter this is. Committee Chairman, Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) said the bee decline should be part of the current discussion of a new farm bill. “The U.S. honey industry is facing one of the most serious threats ever from colony collapse disorder,” he stated. “The bee losses associated with this disorder are staggering and portend equally grave consequences for the producers of crops that rely on honeybees for pollination. These crops include many specialty crops and alfalfa, so viable honey bee colonies are critically important across our entire food and agriculture sector.” (17)

Alfalfa? We should be worried because CCD threatens alfalfa and other specialty crops? He means apples and stuff we can assume, because Mark Brady, president of the American Honey Producers Association, had informed the committee that “honey bees pollinate more than 90 food, fiber and seed crops. In particular, the fruits, vegetables and nuts that are cornerstones of a balanced and healthy diet are especially dependent on continued access to honey bee pollination.” Science is always a hard sell. (17)

Even before that committee meeting, on April 16, Senator Clinton wrote a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Mike Johanns, asking “that you provide us (a bipartisan group of senators) with an expedited report on the immediate steps that the Department is and will be taking to determine the causes of CCD, and to develop appropriate countermeasures for this serious disorder. In particular, we ask for a specific explanation of how the Department plans to utilize its existing resources and capabilities, including its four Agricultural Research Service honeybee research labs, and to work with other public and private sector enterprises in combating CCD.” These are fine questions indeed. (28)

Hype or understatement?

Bees are finely tuned machines, much more robot-like than your average species. They operate pretty much like the Borg of Star Trek fame. A honey bee cannot exist as an individual, and this is why some biologists speak of them as super-organisms. They are sensitive barometers of environmental pollution, quite useful for monitoring pesticide, radionuclide, and heavy metal contamination. They respond to a vide variety of pollutants by dying or markedly changing their behavior. Honeybees’ stores of pollen and honey are ideal for measuring contamination levels. Some pesticides are exceptionally harmful to honey bees, killing individuals before they can return to the hive. (18)

Not surprisingly, the use of one or more new pesticides was, and likely remains, on the short list of likely causes of CCD. But more than pesticides could potentially be harming bees. Some scientists suspect global warming. Temperature plays an integral part in determining mass behavior of bees. To mention just one temperature response, each bee acts as a drone thermostat, helping cool or warm the hive whenever it isn’t engaged in some other routine.

As you might expect, rising temperatures in springtime cause bees to become active. Erratic weather patterns caused by global warming could play havoc with bees’ sensitive cycles. A lot of northeastern U.S. beekeepers say a late cold snap is what did the damage to them this year. Bill Draper, a Michigan beekeeper, lost more than half of his 240 hives this spring, but it wasn’t his worst year for bee losses, and he doesn’t think CCD caused it. He thinks CCD might stem from a mix of factors from climate change to breeding practices that put more emphasis on some qualities, like resistance to mites, at the expense of other qualities, like hardiness. (32)

According to Kenneth Tignor, the state apiarist of Virginia, another possibility with CCD is that the missing bees left their hives to look for new quarters because the old hives became undesirable, perhaps from contamination of the honey. This phenomenon, known as absconding, normally occurs only in the spring or summer, when there is an adequate food supply. But if they abscond in the autumn or winter, as they did last fall in the U.S., Tignor says the bees are unlikely to survive. (19)

A bee colony is a fine-tuned system, and a lot could conceivably go wrong. This is presumably why some scientists suspect cell phone radiation is the culprit behind CCD. This theory holds that radiation from mobile phones interferes with bee navigation systems, preventing them from finding their way home. German research has shown that bees behave differently near power lines. Now, a preliminary study has found that bees refuse to return to their hives when mobile phones are placed nearby. The head researcher said the result might provide a “hint” of a possible cause. Maybe they should check to see if beekeepers suddenly started using BlackBerrys in 2004.

It should be noted that the CCD Working Group at Penn State believes cell phones are very unlikely to be causing the problem. Nor are they interested in the possibility that GMO crops are responsible. Although GMO crops can contain genes to produce pesticides, some of which may harm bees, the distribution of CCD cases does not appear to correlate with GMO crop plantings. (20)

Honey bees are not native to North America or Europe. They are thought to come from Southeast Asia, although some recent research based on genomic studies indicates that their origin is actually in Africa. (21) Regardless, they represent only seven of the approximately 20,000 known species of bees. Apis mellifera, the most commonly domesticated species of honey bee, was only the third insect to have its genome mapped. These useful, and very prevalent, bees are commonly referred to as either Western honey bees or European honey bees. Although it is a non-native species, the honey bee has fit in well in America. It is the designated state insect of fifteen states, which surely reflects its usefulness.

Apis mellifera comes in a wide variety of sub-species adapted to different climates and geographies. Behavior, color and anatomy can be quite different from one sub-species to another, the infamous killer bees being a case in point. The Native Americans called the honey bee “the white man’s fly.” It was introduced to North America by European settlers in the early 1600s, and soon escaped into the wild, spreading as far west as the Rocky Mountains. Thus, there are significant numbers of feral hives in North America, though most of the honey bees you will see are working bees.

But you may not have even seen one for a while. These days, many gardeners are discovering that they must hand pollinate garden vegetables, thanks to widespread pollinator decline. It is more than fair to say that the extreme importance of honey bees as pollinators today stems from the fact that native pollinators are in decline almost everywhere.

The pollination of the American almond crop, which occurs in February and March, is the largest managed pollination event in the world, requiring more than one third of all the managed honey bees in the United States. Massive numbers of hives are transported for this and other key pollinations, including apples and blueberries. Honey bees are not particularly efficient pollinators of blueberries, but they are used anyway. We depend on managed honey bees because we are addicted to a monoculture-based managed agricultural sector.

There has been criticism that media coverage of the CCD story, perhaps in its quest to achieve the requisite ‘balance,’ has been too rosy. Some stories note that other pollinators are more significant than honey bees for many crops. But these stories seldom go on to tell how other pollinators are facing problems too. The BBC recently reported on the Bumblebee Conservation Trust, which is currently enlisting the public’s help to catalogue bumblebee populations. The story noted that several of the U.K.‘s 25 species are endangered, and three have gone extinct in recent years. (22)
Another recent story in The Register stated that several U.K. bumblebee species are “heading inexorably for extinction.” According to scientists, the process is caused by “pesticides and agricultural intensification” which could have a “devastating knock-on effect on agriculture.” The disappearance of wildflower species has also been implicated in the British bumblebee decline. (23)(20)

Bumblebees are, however, doing well in one region, Neath Port Talbot, which was declared the bumblebee capital of Wales in 2004 after experts found 15 different species thriving there. This is almost certainly because the local council allows roadside verges to become overgrown with “weeds” and wildflowers. (20)

Surprise — it’s an ecosystem thing. As with honeybees and CCD, the root of the bumblebee problem lies in our modern rationalist drive toward endlessly ordering the world around us. The long-term solution is a return to a more natural ecological order. This interpretation needs to be conveyed when mainstream media tell the CCD story.

Of course, with all the parasites, pathogens, pesticides and transit to stress out our hardworking honey bees, they are in peril. Even if some silver bullet saves us from CCD, it is more than obvious that we need to pay more respect to bees, and to nature. This truth may be generalized to most facets of our agricultural existence; the bees are just a warning. Wherever you look, pests are getting stronger as the life forms we depend on get weaker. Adding more chemicals isn’t going to help for much longer.

Beekeepers are a busy and underpaid lot, and we should pay more heed to their services. Even now, with the vanishing bee story headlining on major networks, government players appear to have their eyes elsewhere. “There used to be a lot more regulation than there is today,” says Arizona beekeeper Victor Kaur. “People import bees and bring new diseases into the country. One might be colony collapse disorder.” (30)

“The bees are dying, and I think people are to blame,” is how Kaur puts it simply. “Bee keeping is much more labor intensive now than it was 15 years ago. It’s a dying profession,” he eulogizes. “The average age of a beekeeper is 62, and there are only a couple of thousand of us left. There are only about 2.5 million hives left. …It’s too much work.” (30)

If CCD proves to be more than a one-time seasonal fluke, the job of beekeeping just got a lot harder. Pollination can’t be outsourced, although it isn’t too difficult to imagine fields full of exploited underclass laborers pollinating crops by Q-tip. Let’s hope we never have to go there.

Perhaps a sensible reaction to the information summarized in this short article would be to write a letter to your government leaders. Insist that they immediately allocate significant funding to combat CCD using a variety of approaches. This must include ecological approaches such as wildflower renewal. Furthermore, insist that our few remaining beekeepers be given the support they deserve and desperately need at this important juncture. Humanity cannot afford to ignore this battle. It’s not science; it’s common sense.

References

1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder
Wikipedia
2 http://maarec.cas.psu.edu/FAQ/FAQCCD.pdf
FAQ’s Colony Collapse Disorder (PDF), Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium, CCD Working Group
See also: http://www.ento.psu.edu/MAAREC/index.html
3 http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Alarm_sounded_over_US_honey_bee_die-off
Alarm sounded over US honey bee die-off
Wikinews, February 10, 2007
4 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6438373.stm
Vanishing bees threaten US crops
By Matt Wells, March 11, 2007
5 http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/ap_070211_bee_disease.html
Mystery Ailment Strikes Honeybees
By Genaro C. Armas, Associated Press, February 11, 2007
6 http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/wildlife/article2449968.ece
Are mobile phones wiping out our bees?
By Geoffrey Lean and Harriet Shawcross, April 15, 2007
7 http://message.snopes.com/showthread.php?p=137300
Thread on dubious Einstein quote.
8 http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/04/22/vanishing.bees.reut/index.html
Vanishing honeybees mystify scientists
Reuters, April 22, 2007
9 http://www.bushfarms.com/beespests.htm
Enemies of Bees
by Michael Bush
10 http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/04/070426100117.htm
Scientists Identify Pathogens That May Be Causing Global Honey-Bee Deaths
Source: Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, April 26, 2007
11 http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/050517_bee_mite.html
Bees Wiped Out by Cascade of Deadly Events
By Robert Roy Britt, May 17, 2005
12 http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/05/050517110843.htm
Bee Mites Suppress Bee Immunity, Open Door For Viruses And Bacteria
Source: Penn State, May 18, 2005
13 http://eepicheep.gnn.tv/B21650
Labchuk’s email is reproduced in comments section; authorship was confirmed by this writer
14 http://www.bushfarms.com/bees.htm
Bush Bees Website
15 http://agriculture.senate.gov/Hearings/
Regional Farm Bill field hearing: Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, July 21, 2006
16 http://www.aginfo.psu.edu/News/07Jan/HoneyBees.htm
Honey bee die-off alarms beekeepers, crop growers and researchers
Penn State press release Jan 29, 2007
17 http://www.journaltimes.com/nucleus/index.php?itemid=12512
Colony collapse disorder is reducing U.S. bee population
By Zena McFadden, Medill News Service, April 26, 2007
18 http://www.apimondia.org/apiacta/articles/2003/porrini.pdf
Honey Bees and Bee Products as Monitors of the Environmental Contamination (PDF)
Porrini et al., University of Bologna,
In Apiacta, the journal of the International Federation of Beekeepers’ Associations
( http://www.beekeeping.com/apimondia/apiacta_us.htm )
19 http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-04-27-voa3.cfm
Taiwan Is Latest Country Stung by Vanishing Honey Bees
By Jessica Berman, VOA News, April 27, 2007
20 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/south_west/3747337.stm
Secret of bumblebee capital
BBC, 25 May, 2004
21 http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/12/061211220927.htm
Research Upsetting Some Notions About Honey Bees
Source: Texas A&M University – Agricultural Communications, December 29, 2006
22 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/tayside_and_central/6558973.stm
Bid to halt bumblebee decline
BBC, April 16, 2007
23 http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/17/bumblebee_crisis/
UK’s bumblebees face extinction
By Lester Haines
24 http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/insects/
In Depth Insects: The plight of the honeybee
CBC News Online, Updated April 12, 2007
25 http://www.thestar.com/article/203818
Why are Niagara’s bees dying?
By Dana Flavelle, Toronto Star, April 17, 2007
26 http://tinyurl.com/2wnyjv
Bee mite found on Oahu
Apr 12, 2007 by Katherine Fisher, Hawaii Health Guide.com
27 http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/
Experts may have found what’s bugging the bees
By Jia-Rui Chong and Thomas H. Maugh II, LA Times, April 26, 2007
28 http://tinyurl.com/246o9v
Senator Clinton Calls on USDA to Respond
All American Patriots, April 20, 2007
29 http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/26/taiwan_bee_mystery/
Taiwan mislays millions of honeybees
By Lester Haines, The Register, April 26, 2007
30 http://tinyurl.com/39a2wk
Collapsing colonies
By Joanne C. Twaddell, The Daily Courier, April 23, 2007
31 http://tinyurl.com/343f8b
A Comparison of Russian and Italian Honey Bees (PDF)
By David R. Tarpy, NC State University, and Jeffrey Lee, Beekeeper, Mebane NC
32 http://tinyurl.com/37ax5j
Tiers bees avoid deadly disease
By Salle E. Richards, Elmira Star-Gazette, April 3, 2007

Beagle17

Posted by Beagle17
"RSS here": http://feeds.feedburner.com/GnnBeagle17 Grew up in Nova Scotia. Hold BSc. in Biology and Grad. Diploma Journalism. Moved to Korea in 1997, and Taiwan in 1999. Currently teaching, writing, and doing Web design. Concerned about depleted uranium, Islamophobia,...

Disclaimer: Statements and opinions expressed in articles published on this site are those of the authors and not of the staff or editors of GNN, unless otherwise stated.

RECENT COMMENTS

Beautifully written, extremely informative, and inspiring. I’ll get some letters out by the end of the week, and meanwhile I’ll be passing around the link to this article.

For those interested in discovering just how stressful migratory beekeeping is on the bees, I recommend Following the Bloom by Douglas Whynott. (While the author pays homage to the beekeeping cowboy he perhaps unintentionally sheds light on many negative aspects of this style of beekeeping.)

eepicheep @ 05/03/07 08:01:59

wow, this was more than i ever wanted to know about this problem.

the white man’s fly HAHHAAHHA those white people are vicious, aren’t they?

oh , and I hate oatmeal.

donovonc @ 05/03/07 09:14:46

Best CCD article I’ve seen anywhere.

tango @ 05/03/07 09:25:47

I agree that this problem could have been avoided if only the masters of public interest spent more time using their noggins, learning about science and ecology, and supporting the key facets of society that actually do need attention, rather than only dealing with “issues” that fit into their bureaucratic, management-obsessed worldview.

To understand this philosophical perspective, I recommend reading Voltaire’s Bastards by John Ralston Saul. Here is a link to info on that book

Beagle17 @ 05/03/07 09:36:18

My friend (flesh and blood, not Internet) told me he was going to take up organic beekeeping, natural-size combs of course, as a reaction to what he had learned this month.

I think this concept is worthy of a broad social movement. We are doomed if we continue to let technocrats solely determine how public revenue is spent. As far as I know, beekeepers, who are a fast-shrinking and massively overworked pillar of our agricultural sector, are almost completely ignored by the technocrats in power. They have been trying to tell the world about a looming bee crisis for years. I guess it wasn’t a sexy enough issue.

On a similar note, looking at only the U.K. and U.S., there has been only one president/PM in the last several decade who was trained as a scientist: Margaret Thatcher, and we have her to thank for the fact the ozone crisis was dealt with before it became a total disaster.

Beagle17 @ 05/03/07 09:42:07

Great work. Extensive.

anthony @ 05/03/07 10:20:18

amazing article, beagle. really, really well done.

Number5Toad @ 05/03/07 13:25:55

The only theory missing from this article is the one about solar activity interfereing with the bees navigational abilities. This would explain why there are no bodies found anywhere. Most of the theories I’ve seen (and presented above) are crap. I’m surprised the rethuglicans aren’t all shouting “See! It’s the end of the world! It’s a sign of the end times!”. Damn freaks.

This has happened before, though, and has probably been happening for centuries. It’s not the end of the world. As much as some people like that notion it isn’t true and this isn’t a sign.

Apocrypha @ 05/03/07 13:51:51

I think this concept is worthy of a broad social movement. We are doomed if we continue to let technocrats solely determine how public revenue is spent.

It’s beyond me, why people don’t see a relationship with the Senate’s consideration of the `The F.D.A. Authorization bill [S.1082]’.

U.S. Health Freedom on Verge of Collapse, but nobody seems alarmed.

The FDA will begin a business enterprise called the Reagan-Udall Foundation. This public/private organization run by the FDA will “modernize” food and drug products — for your safety and good health.

This bill looks to, by 2012, have a database of 100,000,000 people to analyze biologics to determine what drugs are best for you.

Technocrats. Indeed.

BTW. Fantastic work, Peter.

dikweed @ 05/03/07 13:59:40

Thank you for an informative read.
Well done!

metasense @ 05/03/07 14:05:22

Thank you for an informative read.
Well done!

metasense @ 05/03/07 14:05:27

The only theory missing from this article is the one about solar activity interfereing with the bees navigational abilities. This would explain why there are no bodies found anywhere. Most of the theories I’ve seen (and presented above) are crap

Please support these comments with actual evidence, Apocrypha.

tango @ 05/03/07 14:12:22

Can’t we just train mosquitoes to start pollinating our crops? Seems to me like they could use the positive PR…

Truthcansuk @ 05/03/07 14:26:19

Awesome! Very nice indeed…

“it isn’t too difficult to imagine fields full of exploited underclass laborers pollinating crops by Q-tip.”

Woudl this be the solution, or more like crop dusters with tons and tons of pollen in their holds spraying over large fields, can that be done on a massive scale?

It is difficult to imagine an army of such workers, that would be a tough job, akin to picking cotton in the 19th century south. There would be a massive dilemna therein.

We need to stop the war and take care of our house, these environmental disasters are getting out of control, and ecologically we are coming to an impasse that cannot be backtracked in the hopes it will go away.

That impasse will be the death of biodioversity, we will live purely on science, which will only go so far i think until the end, the bitter end.

Our childrens’ children will weep for this.

tyrecian @ 05/03/07 15:28:28

...Margaret Thatcher, and we have her to thank for the fact the ozone crisis was dealt with before it became a total disaster.

She is also possibly responsible for the CJD outbreak (allowing rendering temps to be reduced thus saving a buck-ha), and certainly responsible for its subsequent spread.

As a ‘scientist’ her great achievment was introducing air into ice-cream- thus increasing manufacturers’ profit.

BetterRed @ 05/03/07 15:50:20

This has happened before, though, and has probably been happening for centuries. It’s not the end of the world. As much as some people like that notion it isn’t true and this isn’t a sign.

wow. did you even read the article?

Number5Toad @ 05/03/07 15:54:58

Toad – wow. did you even read the article?

Can we just set up the GNN computer to ask that after every third posting? It would save a lot of time…

Truthcansuk @ 05/03/07 15:57:46

only if we can program it to ask for appropriate citations every tenth post as well.

Number5Toad @ 05/03/07 15:59:59

Appropriate citations?

What, you don’t enjoy a new variation on the same WTC/Global warming threads every 3 days? How are we going to know an argument is a bad one if we don’t read it again and again, Toad?!?

Truthcansuk @ 05/03/07 16:04:27

Nobody worried all that much about the loss of a few animal species here and there until one day the bees came to their senses and decided to quit producing an unnaturally large surplus of honey for our benefit. One by one, they went on strike and flew off to parts unknown.

“So long, and thanks for all the flowers.”

Snark @ 05/03/07 16:11:35

Can’t we just train mosquitoes to start pollinating our crops? Seems to me like they could use the positive PR

we can figure out what makes them attracted to our blood, then engineer it into the corn, along with the other bacteria!

Bacteria DNA, human blood DNA, there’s nothing like good corn in the summer!

a_pretty_rainbow @ 05/03/07 16:19:38

which will only go so far i think until the end, the bitter end

bitter? Haven’t you read the book of revelations? The End Times are gonna be sweet if you are on the special made-it-to-heaven waiting list.

a_pretty_rainbow @ 05/03/07 16:23:13

This has happened before, though, and has probably been happening for centuries
yes- a hundred years back

And the way we exploit bees is an issue

The parasite, which is endemic to Asia, first arrived on U.S. shores in 1987, most likely smuggled in some eager apiarist’s luggage. (Bee importation has been illegal in this country since 1922.) It caused negligible damage in Europe, where it first appeared in 1908, because the beekeeping industry is smaller and far less mobile. In the U.S., however, the mite jumped from hive to hive with alarming rapidity. “In the U.S., beekeepers are a bunch of mechanized gypsies, moving from crop to crop all through the year chasing pollination fees and honey flows,” said Frank Eischen, a U.S. Department of Agriculture research entomologist tasked with searching for new medicines to keep the invaders at bay. “Because of all this unnatural movement, some colonies get stressed, and they may be more susceptible.”

2.5 million hives left… in industrial bee-exploiter hands-not in the wild
johnnycivil @ 05/03/07 17:54:22

I like your phrase industrial bee-exploiter, johnnycivil. But when you and apocrypha say this has happened before, I think you are confusing it with what was termed Disappearing Disease in 1915. The difference is that in cases of Colony Collapse Disorder, no other bees or insects are robbing the hives of the honey left behind.

Here is one entomologist’s statement.

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.

I, too, was somewhat heartened at first to discover the 1915 outbreak of Disappearing Disease, until I learned about the complete absence of hive-robbing with CCD.

stupid textile
eepicheep @ 05/03/07 18:47:03

You can vote for this story on Digg.

Johnnycivil’s latest blog is number one on Digg right now. Way to go, Johnny.

Beagle17 @ 05/03/07 23:21:45

really good article, kinda puts together a lot of the stuff that i’ve seen around, almost too long, i just had to keep on reading though, i almost stopped but i made myself read the whole thing.

Houndoggie @ 05/04/07 01:36:38

The next bit after eepicheep’s quote ends. (Great links.)

Another of the researchers studying the collapses, Dennis van Engelsdorp, a bee specialist with the State of Pennsylvania, said it was still difficult to gauge their full extent. It was possible that the bees were fleeing the colonies because they sensed they themselves were diseased or affected in some way, he said. This behaviour has been recorded in other social insects, such as ants. link

Beagle17 @ 05/04/07 14:48:15

Notes:

There’s a typo in paragraph 9: “News of the CCD problem hit all of the major media networks in February 2006” should say 2007

The photo should be given credit. It is by prolific and award-winning Wikipedia contributer, Fir0002.

Beagle17 @ 05/05/07 06:58:35

My comment is on pollination in general. I have read several news articles on the subject of CCD in the past few months, and this one is by far the most thorough. I live in the country, have many varieties of fruit bearing trees, and I can assure you that there is no lack of pollinators here in southwestern Ohio. I spent several minutes a couple of weeks ago observing bee activity on my apple trees during their blossom stage, as well as observing my other trees as they have flowered, and can report these results.

!. During this entire spring, I have seen no common honey bees on any of my flowering trees or bushes. (bush cherry, cherry, gooseberry, plum, apple and pear)

2. There is no lack of pollinators however. On my apple trees I have observed at least 4 varieties of wasps and bees busy gathering pollen. They ranged in size from small 1/8 inch what appear to be wasps (smooth body) , 1/4 inch black fuzzy woods bees ( my unscientific terminology of course) , 1/2 inch mixed black and pale yellow woods bees (similar in size to the regular honey bee) and the good old standard bumble bees.

Of this collection, the small wasp like insects were by far the most prevalent, with the small woods bees second. I would guess that at around 2 pm or so, every 3 rd apple blossom had at least one pollinator. The small ones were also the only pollinators on my bush cherry which is the first tree to blossom in my yard.

I can only conclude that if you are in need of pollinators, just locate your orchard near a natural area where there are large populations of wild pollinators of multiple species.

garykirk @ 05/06/07 09:29:48

“Can we just set up the GNN computer to ask that after every third posting? It would save a lot of time…”

GNN has a computer?

athena @ 05/06/07 16:42:55

Funny how this ten year old story gets missed in the CCD news.
I guess Orwell’s Memory hole is working.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neonicotinoids

Neonicotinoids have been strictly limited in France since the 1990s, when they were implicated in a mass die-off of the bee population.

Imidacloprid effects on bee population (This pesticide, while banned in France, has been rapidly increasing in usage in the USA)
———————————————————————————

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imidacloprid_effects_on_bee_population

In France, Imidacloprid started being used in 1994 as a seed-coating for sunflowers. The following years, some beekeepers mentioned the possibility of a relationship between the pesticide and some behavioral troubles in bees. Bayer CropScience made some studies on the topic, which concluded Gaucho was non-toxic to bees. At this point, most discussions were kept rather private between Bayer and beekeeper associations.
However, during summer 1997, heavy losses of bees where observed in several regions of France and the controversy became public.
———————————————————————————
In the case of the accusations against Imidacloprid, the issue is not the direct death of the bees, but behavioral changes such as disorientation, feeding problems, and communication disturbance.

fijijim @ 05/08/07 00:13:32

I’ve been avidly following all news of CCD since March and this is a gold mine of information. Especially impressed with the info about enlarged combs and British bumblebee decline. Cheers for this article, and I will link many to it!

;)
st

stfrequency @ 05/08/07 02:11:15

“Funny how this ten year old story gets missed in the CCD news.”

Good question. Publicize it. The Wiki page on CCD (now locked) mentions Imidacloprid and the neonicotinoid pesticide possibility a bit. Thank God for Wiki.

Beagle17 @ 05/09/07 15:02:25

Here is an interesting story on the importance of wild bees to pollination and commercial bee health:

Wild Bees Enhance the Productivity of Honeybees – This could have direct economical results
By: Stefan Anitei, Science Editor (Softpedia)

Beagle17 @ 05/11/07 14:25:01

Check out my recent article:
http://www.realitysandwich.com/node/133

;)
st

stfrequency @ 05/17/07 00:25:03

Thanks for the “short” article, or short book. Way better than Wiki

stephenstillwell @ 05/19/07 14:57:16

It is very clear and simple that we “the human population” inhabiting this small planet, where we have evolved and orgininally put here to have dominion over the all. The creative energies, or whatever you may actually be calling it…call it God for lack of any specifics title. The answers are really all the above (read the article). We are lacking in our sensitivity toward mother earth, knowing she is our support system and also our charge. We tend to be unworthy shepherds as we go about the business of profit & yes, call it technocracy if you like – only to discover loss at our own ignorant hands. The hard sell is to make the necessary changes to promote life on this planet…it will take extraordinary people like us to do that. Roll up your long sleeve shirts, take the suit off and hang it up for a while & let’s get busy with the jobs (high paying jobs at that- if we deem it important) at hand. Our children and childrens children will thank us for it…

all4peace2007 @ 05/21/07 14:08:49

dikweed, that’s brilliant!

eepicheep @ 05/22/07 08:06:11

yes but unfortunately we’re still fucked. funny tho

ill_logik @ 05/22/07 09:31:14

stfrequency, good article … why Reality Sandwich and not GNN?

I’ve been thinking a lot all week about this beekeeping practice of taking ALL the honey and feeding them with high fructose corn syrup …

I found an abstract of report on clinical trials using honey in wound care and can read full text PDF here (which I can’t do until later this week). It seems to me that there is a bee-centric reason for the antibiotic (and other) properties of the honey, and that they need their own honey more now than ever before. I just don’t think that sugar syrup is the proper food for them. Of course this would not explain the wild bee population decline, and might not completely explain CCD, but I think the total cessation of the sugar-syrup substitution would be a big step in restoring vigor and natural resistances.

eepicheep @ 05/22/07 09:55:07

I think the total cessation of the sugar-syrup substitution would be a big step in restoring vigor and natural resistances.

Yeah that. Every time humans try to improve on a natural system, we mess it up – you’d think we’d learn by now…

Snark @ 05/22/07 09:57:25

Flowers’ Fragrance Diminished by Air Pollution, University of Virginia Study Indicates

April 10, 2008 — Air pollution from power plants and automobiles is destroying the fragrance of flowers and thereby inhibiting the ability of pollinating insects to follow scent trails to their source, a new University of Virginia study indicates. This could partially explain why wild populations of some pollinators, particularly bees – which need nectar for food – are declining in several areas of the world, including California and the Netherlands.

Does anybody here have acces to the journal Atmospheric Environment? My uni doesn’t seem to have a subscription… Liv, Tango, Snark (where is he btw?)...

BurningMonk @ 04/28/08 03:16:34

Colony Collapse Disorder: A Complex Buzz

“Colony Collapse Disorder: A Complex Buzz” was published in the May/June 2008 issue of Agricultural Research [the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s science] magazine.
dikweed @ 07/03/08 20:12:26

Bayer on defensive in bee deaths
German authorities look into allegation that RTP maker’s pesticide harms environment

Bayer CropScience is facing scrutiny because of the effect one of its best-selling pesticides has had on honeybees.

A German prosecutor is investigating Werner Wenning, Bayer’s chairman, and Friedrich Berschauer, the head of Bayer CropScience, after critics alleged that they knowingly polluted the environment.

The investigation was triggered by an Aug. 13 complaint filed by German beekeepers and consumer protection advocates, a Coalition against Bayer Dangers spokesman, Philipp Mimkes, said Monday.

The complaint is part of efforts by groups on both sides of the Atlantic to determine how much Bayer CropScience knows about the part that clothianidin may have played in the death of millions of honeybees.

——————-

Blast rocks Bayer plant in Institute

INSTITUTE, W.Va. — Witnesses reported seeing a red fireball and feeling a blast as far away as Charleston, after an explosion was reported at the Bayer Crop Science Plant in Institute at 10:35 p.m. Thursday. The explosion was heard at least as far away as Mink Shoals.

Namaste_Rich @ 08/29/08 02:06:44
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