What's going on with Bees?
By nuffsed
@nuffsed (1271)
April 1, 2007 4:17am CST
There's a quiet pandemic going on, and it has hit Europe too!!!
Bees Dying by the Millions
Honeybees are vanishing at an alarming rate from 24 US states, threatening the production of numerous crops.
The cause of the losses, which range from 30% to more than 70%, is a mystery, but experts are investigating several theories.
American bee colonies have been hit by regional crises before, but keepers say this is the first national crisis.
Bees pollinate more than $14bn (£7bn) worth of US seeds and crops each year, mostly fruits, vegetables and nuts.
The mystery disappearances highlight the important link that honeybees play in the chain that brings fruit and vegetables to supermarkets and dinner tables.continued at :
http://www.celsias.com/blog/2007/02/27/bees-dying-by-the-millions/
7 people like this
6 responses
@ElusiveButterfly (45940)
• United States
17 Apr 07
It is really kind of freaky to know that the bees have taken flight so to speak. I wonder how they will replace the lost bees? Cost of honey and other crops will certainly rise.
@nuffsed (1271)
•
18 Apr 07
Can you see a problem???
Published on Monday, June 6, 2005 by Inter Press Service
India: Calls to Ban GM Crops Intensify After Rats Suffer
by Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI - Environmentalists and food security activists in India have renewed calls for a moratorium on genetically modified (GM) foods and crops after rats reportedly secretly tested with GM corn diets by the U.S. agribusiness and biotech giant Monsanto developed blood and organ abnormalities.
Monsanto's tests are already the subject of brewing controversy in Europe, where the transnational corporation is facing increasing resistance to its products and where legal initiatives are being mounted to compel bureaucrats to make public the full results of the tests.
So far, Monsanto has maintained that its 1, 139-page report could not be revealed, even to the European Food Safety Authority, on the grounds that it ''contains confidential business information which could be of commercial use to our competitors.'' ~~~end quote~~~ report continues at link....
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0606-05.htm
When the television news tells you it may be mobile phones that are causing bees to get lost.........think about the sudden incidence of "lost" bees throughout Europe, U.K. America and Canada.
The ask yourself if it could be GM crops, and if so why have GM crops been allowed to proliferate despite serious warnings from farmers, growers and animal experts.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://www.psrast.org/
Physicians and Scientists for Responsible Application
of Science and Technology
Gene transfer from GE rapeseed to bacteria and fungi
in guts of honey bees
By Greenpeace Germany
http://www.psrast.org/beegutht.htm
The German Television ZDF reported on Sunday May 21 that a German researcher found a gene transfer from genetically engineered rapeseed to bacteria and fungi in the gut of honey bees. Prof. Hans-Hinrich Kaatz from the Institut fur Bienenkunde (Institute for bee research) at the University of Jena experimented during the last three years with honey bees on an experimental field with transgenic rapeseed in Saxony, Germany.
The field trial was performed by AgrEvo, the rapeseed was engineered to resist the herbicide glufosinate (Liberty, Basta). Prof. Kaatz built nets in the field with the transgenic rapeseed and let the bees fly freely within the net. At the beehives, he installed pollen traps in order to sample the pollen loads from the bees' hindlegs when entering the hive.
This pollen was fed to young honey bees in the laboratory. (Pollen is the natural diet of young bees which need a high protein diet). Then Prof.Kaatz took the intestine out of the young bees and spread the contents on growth medium to grow the microorganisms.
He probed the microorganisms for the pat-gene, the gene that confers resistance to glufosinate. In some bacteria and also in a yeast hefound the pat-gene. This indicates that the gene from the genetically engineered rapeseed was transferred in the bee gut to the microbes.
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Comment by PSRAST
The transfer of genes from GE crops to bacteria has potentially problematic consequences. Mae-Wan Ho has pointed out that there is genetic material in GE crops that is designed to counteract the mechanisms that prevent foreign DNA to attach to the chromosomes, see "Horizontal transfer of viral and bacteria DNA facilitated by GE organisms?".
This group of scientists warns that the spread of such genetic material to bacteria may promote the development of completely new strains of bacteria by promoting DNA transfer between unrelated strains of bacteria. They suggest that this might already have contributed to the remarkable increase of new and dangerous bacterial strains like the E.Coli 157 where Coli has taken up genes from an unrelated bacterium (the dysenterium bacterium Shigella). The result has been a bacteria that causes serious hemmorrhagic gastrointestinal disease that has been lethal in several cases.
If these scientists are right, Bacteria and fungi in the bee gut might become one such source of new diseases which might spread to humans through the venoms.
This is one of many examples of the increasing number of unexpected and potentially serious consequences of genetic engineering of crops. This kind of gene transfer is completely irreversible and uncontrollable. This means that if it turns out that it may generat serious problems in the ecology of microbes, there is no known means of stopping it. This is one of several examples of the kind of potential problems that made us demand a global moratorium on the release of GE organisms, see our Declaration.
Jaan Suurküla M.D.
@Stiletto (4579)
•
6 Apr 07
You know I have to say you certainly have varied interests! Hens, pagan cults, World Social Forum and now bees! At least I'm learning something on here :)
The bee thing is really worrying and I just bet it's something to do with pesticides. Will we ever learn to treat the environment with some respect? How much more irreversible damage will be done before we learn our lesson and say enough is enough? Sometimes I just despair ...
1 person likes this
@nuffsed (1271)
•
7 Apr 07
Our world leaders are so preoccupied with lofty plots and manouverings that the plight of the humble bee is seemingly insignificant. Yet we would be extinct pretty quickly if the bee and fellow pollenators suddenly took off!!!
We need to rethink the power of the Corporations. They will poison anything to get a product sold!!The EPA,WHO and NGO's are powerless in the face of lobbyists and shareholders who have short term self interest priorities.
Yet we defer and show respect for our leaders!! Seems to me, the most favoured criminal tool, is a smart suit!!
@desertdarlene (8910)
• United States
1 Apr 07
I have heard of this and people should be concerned. I don't think people realize how serious this is. Bees are the most efficient way of pollinating our crops. There really is no other efficient way of doing it. If our bees start dying our crops will suffer. I wonder what this could mean for the future.
@hockeygal4ever (10021)
• United States
5 Apr 07
It's actually rather frightening to see. While I'm not sure economically how it will effect us, as I'm not sure how much we truly rely on honey as an additive to foods, either way we will feel a pinch I'm sure.
I was under the understanding that it seemed to effect mostly bee keepers' bees and not naturaly colonies. If it's effecting all of the bees we will definitely have to figure out what to do in order to pollinate and I'm certain we'll lose a lot of crops this year! It could be a huge issue and create quite a price increase in many items. I hope we figure out the options and how to handle the situation soon!
@Willowlady (10658)
• United States
8 Apr 07
It is a shameful thing for us to have this happening to a critter that helps us to have food on our tables. I think that they will find the genetically modified plants will be taking their toll on the bees in our lives. Consider the bee as the canary in the mine and speak up for a remedy for all of our own goods and definitely that of the bee.
1 person likes this
@AskAlly (3625)
• Canada
4 Apr 07
This really concerns me as well as I keep a few bees myself. Research does not seem to yield any answers. I hope it does not reach Canada at all. Hopefully an answer will be found. I can't even find history on whether or not this has ever even happened before. This has the potential to cause huge problems.