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Plight of U.S. bumblebees worsens, crops threatened
#1
BY JEFF BARNARD
Associated Press

Looking high and low, Robbin Thorp can no longer find a species of bumblebee that just five years ago was plentiful in northwestern California and southwestern Oregon. Thorp, an emeritus professor of entomology from the University of California at Davis, found one solitary worker last year along a remote mountain trail in the Siskiyou Mountains, but hasn't been able to locate any this year.

He fears that the species -- Franklin's bumblebee -- has gone extinct before anyone could even propose it for the endangered species list. To make matters worse, two other bumblebee species -- one on the East coast, one on the West -- have gone from common to rare.

Amid the uproar over global warming and mysterious disappearances of honeybee colonies, concern over the plight of the bumblebee has been confined to scientists laboring in obscurity. But if bumblebees were to disappear, farmers and entomologists warn, the consequences would be huge, especially coming on top of the problems with honeybees, which are active at different times and on different crops.

Bumblebees are responsible for pollinating an estimated 15 percent of all the crops grown in the United States, worth $3 billion. In the wild, birds and bears depend on bumblebees for berries and fruits.

There is no smoking gun yet, but a recent National Academy of Sciences report on the status of pollinators around the world blames a combination of habitat lost to housing developments and intensive agriculture, pesticides, pollution, and diseases spilling out of greenhouses using commercial bumblebee hives.

'We have been naive'
''We have been naive,'' said Neal Williams, assistant professor of biology at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. "We haven't been diligent the way we need to be.'' The threat has bumblebee advocates lobbying Congress to allocate more money for research and to create incentives for farmers to leave uncultivated land for habitat. They also want farmers to grow more flowering plants that native bees feed on.

''We are smart enough to deal with this,'' said Laurie Adams, executive director of the Pollinator Partnership. "There is hope.'' Companies in Europe, Israel and Canada adapted bumblebees to commercial use in the early 1990s, and they are now standard in greenhouses raising tomatoes and peppers.

Generating a buzz
Demand is growing for bumblebees as supplies of honeybees decline, said Holly Burroughs, general manager for production for the U.S. branch of Koppert Biological Systems, a Netherlands company that sells most of the commercial bumblebees in the United States.

Scientists hoping to pinpoint the cause of the nation's honeybee decline recently identified a previously unknown virus, but stress, parasitic mites, pesticides and poor nutrition all remain suspects.

Unlike honeybees, which came to North America with the European colonists of the 17th century, bumblebees are natives. They collect pollen and nectar, but make very little honey.

A huge problem facing scientists is how ''appallingly little we know about our pollinating resources,'' said University of Illinois entomology Prof. May Berenbaum, who headed the National Academy of Sciences report.

Scott Black, executive director of the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation in Portland, worries that on top of pesticides and habitat loss, disease could be the last straw for many species. ''It definitely could all come crashing down,'' he said.

Source: miamiherald.com

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#2
Albert Einstein said it best:

"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."
 
That includes the illuminati... oh well, any wins a good win I suppose, at least the Earth will live to enjoy it.
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#3
This is an urban legend. So far historical printed material showed no such quote from Einstein.

http://www.snopes.com/quotes/einstein/bees.asp
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#4
GB, that’s interesting info. I’ve seen that quote all over the net about Einstein. That’s a good example of how rumors get started. Here’s another interesting article on the bee situation.

Suspects fingered in case of missing bees

By KATHY KEATLEY GARVEY/Special to The Democrat
Daily Democrat

Noted UC Davis honey bee specialist Eric Mussen fingered a line-up of prime suspects at his "BSI: The Case of the Disappearing Bees" lecture, part of the UC Davis Department of Entomology's Distinguished Seminar Series.

Mussen identified malnutrition, parasitic mites, infectious microbes and insecticide contamination as among the possible culprits. It's a complex issue, he said, but one thing is certain: "It seems unlikely that we will find a specific, new and different reason for why bees are dying."

Colony collapse disorder, a phenomenon where bees mysteriously abandon their hives, is not a new occurrence, said Mussen, the Extension Apiculturist at UCD since 1976.

"Similar phenomena have been observed since 1869," he said. "It persisted in 1963, 1964 and 1965 and was called Spring Dwindling, Fall Collapse and Autumn Collapse. Then in 1975, it was called Disappearing Disease."

"But the disease wasn't what was disappearing," Mussen quipped. "The bees were."

Massive bee die-off also occurred during the winter of 2004-05, but only those who read bee journals knew about it, Mussen told the crowd in the campus Activities Recreation Center.

The latest die-off caught the attention of the national media last fall when a Pennsylvania beekeeper asked researchers at Pennsylvania State University to look at samples of his dying bees in Pennsylvania and Florida. "The local media picked up the story and the rest is history, including yours truly on the Lehrer Hour."

One-third of America's honey bees vanished this past year due to the mysterious CCD, characterized by almost total hive abandonment. Nearly all adult worker bees unexpectedly fly away from the hive, abandoning the stored honey, pollen, larvae and pupae. Usually they leave in less than a week, and only the queen and a few young workers remain, Mussen said.

Honey bees normally do not abandon their brood, he said. "Nurse bees" continually feed the young, which increase 1,000-fold in size in six days. "That's like an 8-pound baby weighing 4 tons in six days," Mussen said.

Mussen, who received the American Association of Professional Apiculturists' excellence award in January for his bee industry leadership and apicultural research publications, and was named the California State Beekeepers' Association's 2006 "Beekeeper of the Year" for his industry-wide contributions, finds the silence of the bees troubling.

"The real reason bees are important is that we rely on them for crop pollination," he said. Commercial honey bees pollinate about 90 of the country's crops, valued at $15 billion.

"One third of our U.S. diet depends on honey bees," Mussen said. "If bees produce fruits and vegetables somewhere else, do we (Americans) want to be as dependent on food as we are on oil?"

Bees are especially crucial to California's 600,000 acres of almonds, he said. To pollinate the almonds, growers need 1.2 million bees, "but California doesn't have 1.2 million bees, so they have to be trucked here."

http://www.dailydemocrat.com/news/ci_7203252
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#5
GB, 

He did not write this statement on any paperwork, he quoted in once in an open seminar he had in the USA.  I was told about it myself by a teacher when I was in early high school... which makes it almost a couple of decades before the internet even existed. 

I would hasten to add that either way, it is TRUE.  Without our pollinators, we are doomed in a very short period of time thereafter.  That's logical, we do not need to be an Einstein to understand that. 

Time will tell what's causing their disappearance I've no doubt that those truly or mostly responsible for it are in hiding now and doign their best to remain that way. 

Loosing these pollinators is not good either way.
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