Are GM Crops Killing Bees?

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Death of the Bees: GMO Crops and the Decline of Bee Colonies in North America [/FONT]
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]‘Commercial beehives pollinate over a third of [North}America’s crops and that web of nourishment encompasses everything from fruits like peaches, apples, cherries, strawberries and more, to nuts like California almonds, 90 percent of which are helped along by the honeybees. Without this pollination, you could kiss those crops goodbye, to say nothing of the honey bees produce or the flowers they also fertilize’. [/FONT]
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8436
 

mabudon

Metal King
Mar 15, 2006
1,339
30
48
Golden Horseshoe, Ontario
I just gotta say Walter would blame the sun for the pharmaceuticals in our water supply, too funny. I can just imagine him on Jeopardy, he could write down his final jeopardy answer before the game even started and ring in first everytime with "what is the sun Alex?" :D


This colony collapse thing is weird, to be sure. Coupled with a few other fairly recent trends/phenomena we might actually screw ourselves outta having enough food for even a fraction of the population, since I would imagine the folks who likely have the least to do with the actual production of food will be the ones who have the means to hold on longest in the event of global famine (just a conjecture but it feels correct-ish)

We might be able to live without snow leopards and dodoes but bees going extinct is gonna HURT, hand pollinating a single almond tree would probably take a while, doing to every one will be this side of impossible, to say nothing of all the wild flora that would need to be dealt with.

Glad it's just natural progression and we have nothing to worry about
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I think Walters correct about the suns impact on global climate, if he says the bee problem may also be connected to the suns lack of activity lately the I'm inclined to listen. I read a little bit from a Russian climatologist last week and he said the planet is cooling, the Artic ice is thickening and he also pointed to solar activity as the biggest contributing factor. He also said to get used to wearing furs because we have a very good chance of entering a mini ice age similar to the last short one of five-hundred years that ended in 1850. Al Gore and David Susuki are corporate pawns and mouth pieces, they both work for the oil lobby.
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Migratory Beekeepers Worry About Their Livelihood
"Einstein's theory-- it's been, oh, a couple years ago-- was that within about four years, there would be no more food to sustain life anywhere on the planet, to pollinate orchards, pollinate everything out there," said Daniel McLaury, a migratory beekeeper from Montana.
Bees may be the fuzzy, buzzing creatures humans try to avoid, but without them, there would be nothing to pollinate our fruit, the plants livestock eat, the cane to make sugar, even coffee. "Without the bees, there is no life, there is no food to eat," said McLaury. "So we're going to get real hungry really soon without bees."

Posted Apr 8, 2008 01:19 PM PST
Category:
SCIENCE/HEALTH


It is an established fact that pollen from genetically modified plants is harmful to insects. Bees that are not exposed to genetically altered plants seem to avoid Colony Collapse Disorder. But as beekeepers are hired to transport their hives from farm to farm to farm, exposure to genetically modified crops becomes inevitable.
http://www.kimatv.com/news/local/17371779.html
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Honey Bee Collapse Now Worse on West Coast
IS THERE ANY MORE HARDER DATA LINKING THE GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS TO THE WEAKENING AND DISAPPEARANCE OF THE HONEY BEES?
Yes, that's certainly being looked at. In fact, I read an article the other day talking about some genetically modified crops that had the BT toxin in it (genetically modified crops with built-in pesticide) and they found that with the BT toxin, there are a couple of different toxins involved, and one toxin they found was actually opening up the cell walls of insects and animals to allow this second toxin in to affect it. So, we don't understand what we do - and places such as Monsanto.
So, we're going down a precarious path and we don't know everything. Unfortunately, we will make mistakes as human beings, but the repercussions as things grow and become more global and widespread is that the repercussions will be more severe and more dramatic.
SO, WHILE WE ARE PROMOTING A GM FOOD INTO THE FUTURE ON THE ONE HAND IN GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS, WE COULD BE KILLING THE VERY INSECT THAT KEEPS PLANTS ALIVE. Yes, but there again, if the seed companies can develop plants that don't need insect pollinators, and keep selling seed to the farmers, maybe that's the goal.

Posted Apr 13, 2008 09:25 AM PST
Category:
SCIENCE/HEALTH


... if the seed companies can develop plants that don't need insect pollinators, and keep selling seed to the farmers, maybe that's the goal.
http://www.earthfiles.com/news.php?ID=1416&category=Environment
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
The Bees Die...The Planet Dies
am speaking about the extermination of the bees - on which depends 80 % of the pollination of cultivated plants - by Imidaclopride which Bayer sells under the name of Gaucho to the farmers to coat seeds and to protect them from certain diseases... This product paralyses insects such as bees which cannot return to the hive and they therefore die. When they do succeed, the honey which results from it is toxic (because it's poisoned). In less than three years, 450 000 hives were thus lost and production of honey fell from 45 000 tons to 25 000 tons in France. In Alsace, bee-keepers are regarded as disaster victims because of the Bayer products. In addition, it should be known that in Europe, approximately 4 000 vegetable species have their life assured thanks to pollination by bees.

Posted Apr 28, 2008 10:10 AM PST
Category:
SCIENCE/HEALTH
http://rinf.com/alt-news/environmental-news/the-bees-diethe-planet-dies/111/
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Honey Bee Crisis Could Push Food Prices Even Higher

Food prices could rise even more unless the mysterious decline in honey bees is solved, farmers and businessmen told lawmakers Thursday.
"No bees, no crops," North Carolina grower Robert D. Edwards told a House Agriculture subcommittee. Edwards said he had to cut his cucumber acreage in half because of the lack of bees available to rent.
... The cause behind the disorder remains unknown. Possible explanations include pesticides; a new parasite or pathogen; and the combination of immune-suppressing stresses such as poor nutrition, limited or contaminated water supplies and the need to move bees long distances for pollination.

Posted Jun 27, 2008 08:20 AM PST
Category: ECONOMY
, Category: SCIENCE/HEALTH


Note the one potential cause they are careful NOT to mention; genetically modified crops. Yet it has been known since 1999 that pollen from genetically modified crops can harm beneficial insect species.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/26/honey-bee-crisis-could-pu_n_109505.html
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Are mobile phones wiping out our bees?
Are mobile phones wiping out our bees?...
Posted Jul 6, 2008 03:38 PM PST
Category: SCIENCE/HEALTH


This is a false trail, and no doubt the "experts" making this claim are well-funded by partiess with something to hide.
But consider.
All cellular telephones are just radios. Very low power radios. And we have been pouring out radio waves all over the planet for over 100 years! Indeed, with the advent of cable TV, satellite, and directional antennas making communications more efficient, if anything the total amount of radio energy being pumped into the environment has declined in the period since the end of WW2, where 50,000 watt stations slamming their way across the globe were the norm. So, if cellular phones were the reason for the colony collapse disorder, why have we only seen the effects in the last few years (the same time that genetically modified crops have come into widespread use)?
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/are-mobile-phones-wiping-out-our-bees-444768.html
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
What's the buzz about all our missing bees?
Meanwhile, America has a more perplexing bee problem. Colonies there really are disappearing. There is even a name for it - collapsing colony disorder (CCD) - and it is getting worse.
"There is no explanation for it as yet," said Mr Inson. "The bees just abandon their hives and vanish. There is no sign of disease, no sign of anything. "Oh, there have been theories. Climate change hasn't been dismissed, but the notion that electrical impulses from mobile phones were affecting the bees' navigation was quickly dismissed."

Posted Jul 23, 2008 09:58 AM PST
Category: SCIENCE/HEALTH


In 1999, Nature Magazine published a study that proved pollen from transgenic crops was harming beneficial insects. But of course the companies that are behind GM crops are wealthy and powerful, spend billions in advertising, and so the GM link to CCD is dutifully ignored by the corporate media.
http://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/...0&l=whats_the_buzz_about_all_our_missing_bees
 

quandary121

Time Out
Apr 20, 2008
2,950
8
38
lincolnshire
uk.youtube.com
NATURE | Silence of the Bees | The Importance of Bees | PBS

An entomologist and a beekeeper discuss honeybees' crucial role as pollinators and the possibly devastating effects of the mysterious Colony Collapse Disorder, with vibrant close-up shots of bees in action.

From the "NATURE" season premiere "Silence of the Bees," airing on PBS Sunday, October 28 at 8 p.m. (check local listings). Academy Award-winning actor F. Murray Abraham narrates "NATURE," the Peabody and Emmy award-winning series produced by Thirteen/WNET New York for PBS. Major corporate support provided by Canon U.S.A. Inc. and Toyota. For more information, visit http://wwwpbs.org/nature


http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=zIn_RXeTX9k
 

quandary121

Time Out
Apr 20, 2008
2,950
8
38
lincolnshire
uk.youtube.com
The Silence of the Bees

FEATURE ARTICLE - March 19, 2007 by Hannah Nordhaus



Scanning electron microscope image of a bee loaded with pollen. DARWIN DALE/PHOTO RESEARCHERS INC.

The perilous existence of a migratory beekeeper amid a great bee die-off


By the time John Miller realized just how many of his bees were dying, the almonds were in bloom and there was nothing to be done. It was February 2005, and the hives should have been singing with activity, plump brown honeybees working doggedly to carry pollen from blossom to blossom. Instead they were wandering in drunken circles at the base of the hive doors, wingless, desiccated, sluggish, blasé. Miller is accustomed to death on a large scale. “The insect kingdom enjoys little cell repair,” he will often remind you. Even when things are going well, a hive can lose 1,000 bees a day. But the extent of his losses that winter defied even his insect-borne realism. In a matter of weeks, Miller lost almost half of his 13,000 hives — around 300 million bees.
When it happened, Miller was in California’s Central Valley, where each February, when the almond trees burst into extravagant pink-and-white bloom, hundreds of beekeepers descend with billions of bees. More than 580,000 acres of almonds flower simultaneously there, and wild pollinators such as bumblebees, beetles, bats and wasps simply cannot transport enough pollen from tree to tree. Instead, almond ranchers depend on traveling beekeepers who, like retirees in Winnebagos, winter in warm places such as California and Florida, and head north to the Dakotas in the summer, where fields of alfalfa and clover produce the most coveted honey.
This annual bee migration isn’t just a curiosity; it’s the glue that holds much of modern agriculture together. Without the bees’ pollination services, California’s almond trees — the state’s top export crop — would produce 40 pounds of almonds per acre; with the bees, they can generate 2,400 pounds. Honeybees provide the same service for more than 100 other crops, from lettuce to cranberries to oranges to canola, up and down the West Coast. Miller likes to call the annual pilgrimage of the beekeepers the “native migrant tour,” and he likes to call himself the tour’s “padrone.” He has thinning brown hair and an eternally bemused expression, and he never stands still. He is an observant but rebellious Mormon, and he doesn’t look the part of the flannel-and-rubbers-clad beekeeper: His usual uniform includes surf shorts, a baseball cap, running shoes and a race T-shirt. (He has run 25 marathons.) Miller, who is 52, is not the biggest beekeeper in the United States, nor is he the most politically connected — South Dakota’s Richard Adee, with his 70,000 hives, wins that distinction.
http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=16891
 

quandary121

Time Out
Apr 20, 2008
2,950
8
38
lincolnshire
uk.youtube.com
Bee Colony Collapse Mobilizes Federal Rescue Effort
WASHINGTON, DC
July 3, 2007 (ENS)

Two bills now making their way through the U.S. Senate are aimed at reversing the decline in the nation's population of honey bees.
more....
Organic Bees Surviving Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD)
Celsias May 15, 2007

I know this won’t come as a surprise to many of our readers, nor to the many organic beekeepers that have been commenting on our posts, but there have been several reports of organic bee colonies surviving where the ‘industrial’ bee colonies are collapsing. Here is the latest to come to my attention:
more....
Costa Rican honeybees are having really tough year
By José Pablo Ramírez Vindas of the A.M. Costa Rica staff

Honeybees are taking a beating in Costa Rica, although the exact nature of the problem is uncertain. Some beekeepers blame El Niño, the Pacific weather phenomenon.
more....
Bees Vanish, and Scientists Race for Reasons
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO
NY Times – April 24, 1007
BELTSVILLE, Md., April 23 — What is happening to the bees?

More than a quarter of the country’s 2.4 million bee colonies have been lost — tens of billions of bees, according to an estimate from the Apiary Inspectors of America, a national group that tracks beekeeping. So far, no one can say what is causing the bees to become disoriented and fail to return to their hives.
more....
Earth Day Cometh and Earth Day Goeth And Where have all the Bees Gone?
Earth Day Report by Captain Paul Watson

Founder and President of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (1977-
Co-Founder - The Greenpeace Foundation (1972)
Co-Founder - Greenpeace International (1979)
Director of the Sierra Club USA (2003-2006)
Director - The Farley Mowat Institute
Director - harpseals.org

Mystery of the Dying Bees
March 7, 2007 - Cosmos Online
by Benjamin Lester

Something mysterious is killing honey bees, and even as billions are dropping dead across North America, researchers are scrambling to find answers and save one of the most important crop pollinators on Earth. more....
Mystery Ailment Strikes Honeybees
Sunday, February 11, 2007
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - A mysterious illness is killing tens of thousands of honeybee colonies across the country, threatening honey production, the livelihood of beekeepers and possibly crops that need bees for pollination. more....
Shooting Dead Horses
Jean-Claude Gerard Koven
Rancho Mirage, California

Honey bees are suddenly vanishing all over the world. According to Albert Einstein, this is a certain signal that humankind may not have much time left. Is nature giving us final notice that we’re in serious trouble?more...
Are GM Crops Killing Bees?
By Gunther Latsch
March 22, 2007

A mysterious decimation of bee populations has German beekeepers worried, while a similar phenomenon in the United States is gradually assuming catastrophic proportions. The consequences for agriculture and the economy could be enormous. more...
Honeybees Vanish, Leaving Keepers in Peril
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO
NY Times (Business) - February 27, 2007

http://www.thehoneybeeproject.com/news.html
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Honeybee deaths reaching crisis point [/FONT]
[FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]'Britain's honeybees have suffered catastrophic losses this year, according to a survey of the nation's beekeepers, contributing to a shortage of honey and putting at risk the pollination of fruits and vegetables. The survey by the British Beekeepers' Association (BBKA) revealed that nearly one in three of the UK's 240,000 honeybee hives did not survive this winter and spring. The losses are higher than the one in five colonies reported dead earlier this year by the government after 10% of hives had been inspected.'[/FONT]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/aug/12/conservation.wildlife1
 

Stretch

House Member
Feb 16, 2003
3,924
19
38
Australia
Genetically Modified Crops Implicated in Honeybee Colony Collapse Disorder

Tags:
As the disappearance of honeybees continues, researchers are trying desperately to discover the cause of Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). General concensus at this point is that there is more than once cause and the latest culprit may be genetically modified crops. This is one area of research being neglected as mainstream scientists insist GM crops are safe.

Webmaster's Commentary:
We covered this topic before, and I observed that there was a huge rush to pin the blame on pesticides and mites, but that the pesticides and mites had been around for quite a while but CCD has started up just when GM crops were introduced into farms, and that bees fed with non GM pollens were immune from CCD.
There is a great deal of money at stake, and the history of the behavior of American pharmaceutical companies when a lot of money is on the line is not encouraging.

There is a great deal of money invested in GM crops, and hence a great deal of pressur eto NOT investigate whether pollen from GM crops is the cause of CCD, even though GM pollen has already been shown as harmful to benign species.

Genetically Modified Crops Implicated in Honeybee Colony Collapse Disorder | War On You