U.S. Honeybees
Disappearing from Hives, Not Even Leaving a Note
CSI: My Apiary
Grist Magazine, Feb 27, 2007
Don't let the pharmaceutical giants get wind of this: U.S. honeybees
are suffering from "colony collapse disorder." Beekeepers
in 24 states say their pollinating pals are simply disappearing,
with losses of 30 to 60 percent on the West Coast and, in some
cases, more than 70 percent on the East Coast and in Texas. "I
have never seen anything like it," says California keeper
David Bradshaw. "Box after box after box are just empty.
There's nobody home." Perplexed scientists are testing theories
including stress, toxins, and viruses. It's not the first time
bees have met a mystery fate, "but it's never been on a
scale like this," says bee specialist Dennis van Engelsdorp.
With bees pollinating more than $14 billion of U.S. seeds and
crops a year -- every third bite we eat, according to industry
buzz -- those with full hives stand to benefit. "It's supply
and demand," says a keeper who expects to earn $520,000
for a month in California's almond orchards. "That's what
drives the whole dang thing."
straight to the source: The
New York Times, Alexei Barrionuevo,
27 Feb 2007
straight to the source: Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette, Len Barcousky,
25 Feb 2007
straight to the source: The
San Diego Union-Tribune, Jim Downing,
24 Feb 2007
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