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Perils of Commercial Beekeeping
Townhall.com ^ | April 5, 2014 | Paul Driessen

Posted on 04/05/2014 10:24:38 AM PDT by Kaslin

One of America’s earliest food crops – almonds – is also one of the most important for commercial beekeepers. Almonds depend on bees for pollination, but the explosive growth of this bumper crop taxes the very honeybees the industry needs to thrive.

California’s Central Valley produces over 80% of the world’s almonds, valued at over $4 billion in 2012. The boom is poised to continue, with new food products and expanding overseas markets increasing demand to the point that no young almond trees are available for purchase until 2016.

Demand for almonds translates into demand for pollination. So every year commercial beekeepers transport some 60% of all US honeybees to California’s almond groves in February and March, when it’s still winter in most other states. It’s one of their biggest challenges.

For one thing, bee colonies, especially those from northern states, lack sufficient time to emerge from their heat-conserving winter clusters. Some beekeepers thus maintain 20,000 to 30,000 hives. Each one requires careful inspection for diseases and parasites – a meticulous, Herculean task on such a scale.

Complicating the situation, beekeepers are trying to work within a large-scale agricultural system, using an insect whose husbandry practices have changed little since the nineteenth century. The larger the commercial beekeeper’s stock, the harder it can be to tend them and recover from financial setbacks in the form of lost bees.

Almond growers will need 1.5 million hives this year, estimates Colorado beekeeper Lyle Johnston. “It takes almost all the commercial bees in the United States,” to pollinate the almond crop, he says. The payoff can amount to half an individual keeper’s yearly profit.

However, bees can come back from California “loaded with mites and every other disease you can think of,” beekeeper Ed Colby explains. That can often mean bee colony deaths. Last year, US beekeepers experienced an average 30% overwinter bee loss; some lost 10% to 15% of their hives, while others lost much more. It’s a normal cost of doing business, but it can be painful.

Last year’s rate was higher than normal, and higher than any keeper would want. But it was not the “bee-pocalypse” that some news stories claimed. The real story is that efforts to identify a single unifying cause for higher-than-usual losses have failed. Scientists are discovering that multiple issues affect bee health.

Urban, suburban and agricultural “development has reduced natural habitats, clearing out thousands of acres of clover and natural flowers,” a 60 Minutes investigative report observed. “Instead, bees are spending week after week on the road, feeding on a single crop, undernourished and overworked.”

The migration itself is stressful, notes Glenwood Springs, Colorado Post-Independent reporter Marilyn Gleason. “First, there’s the road trip, which isn’t exactly natural for bees, and may include freezing cold or scorching heat. Bees ship out of Colorado before the coldest weather, and drivers may drench hot, thirsty bees with water at the truck wash.”

The convergence in almond groves of so many commercial bees from all over the country creates a hotbed of viruses and pathogens that can spread to many hives. The varroa destructor mite carries at least 19 different bee viruses and diseases, causing major impacts on bee colonies. Parasitic phorid flies are another problem, and highly contagious infections also pose significant threats. The intestinal fungus nosema ceranae, for example, prevents bees from absorbing nutrition, resulting in starvation.

The tobacco ringspot virus was likewise linked recently to the highly publicized problem known as “colony collapse disorder.” CCD occurs when bees in a colony disappear, leaving behind only a queen and a few workers. The term originally lumped together a variety of such “disappearing” disorders recorded in different locales across hundreds of years, as far back as 950 AD in Ireland. Thankfully, as during past episodes, these unexplained incidents have declined in recent years and, despite all these challenges, overall US honeybee populations and the number of managed colonies have held steady for nearly 20 years.

These days, perhaps the biggest existential threat to bees is campaigns purporting to save them. Extreme-green groups like the Center for Food Safety and Pesticide Action Network of North America are blaming an innovative new class of pesticides called neonicotinoids for both over-winter bee losses and CCD.

Allied with several outspoken beekeepers, the activists are pressuring the Environmental Protection Agency, Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency and government regulatory agencies to follow Europe’s lead – and ban neonics. Instead of protecting bees and beekeepers, however, their campaigns will likely cause greater harm – because they ignore the multiple threats that scientists have identified, and because a neonic ban will result in farmers using pesticides that are more toxic to bees.

The European Union’s political decision to suspend neonic use came because France’s new agriculture minister banned their use. That meant French farmers would be at a distinct disadvantage with the rest of Europe, if they were the only ones unable to use the pesticide, noted British environmental commentator Richard North. They could lose $278 million per season in lost yields and extra pesticide spraying.

So the French agricultural ministry sought an EU-wide ban on all neonicotinoids. After several votes and a misleading report on the science, the European Commission imposed a ban, over the objections of many other EU members, who note that the evidence clearly demonstrates the new pesticides are safe for bees.

Years-long field tests have found that real-world exposures have no observable effects on bee colonies. Other studies have highlighted other significant insect, fungal, human and other issues that, singly or collectively, could explain CCD. Having analyzed scores of 2007-2012 bee death incidents, Canadian bee experts concluded that “…very few of the serious bee kills involve neonicotinoid pesticides. Five times as many ‘major’ or ‘moderate’ pesticide-related bee kills were sourced to non-neonic chemicals.”

In Canada’s western provinces, almost 20 million acres of 100% neonic-treated canola is pollinated annually by honeybees and tiny alfalfa leaf-cutter bees. Both species thrive on the crop, demonstrating that neonics are not a problem. Large-scale field studies of honeybees at Canadian universities and a bumblebee field study by a UK government agency found no adverse effects on bees.

Last October, a team of industry scientists published a four-year study of the effects of repeated honeybee exposure to neonic-treated corn and rapeseed (canola) pollen and nectar under field conditions in several French provinces. The study found similar mortality, foraging behavior, colony strength and weight, brood development and food storage in colonies exposed to seed-treated crops and in unexposed control colonies. This also indicates low risk to bees.

At least two more major, recently completed university-run field research projects conducted under complex, costly scientific laboratory guidelines (“good lab practices”) are awaiting publication. All indications to date suggest that they too will find no observable adverse effects on bees at field-realistic exposures to neonicotinoids.

Meanwhile Project ApisM., a partnership of agro-businesses and beekeepers, has invested $2.5 million in research to enhance the health of honeybee colonies. Switzerland-based Syngenta has spent millions expanding bee habitats in Europe and North America, through Project Pollinator. Bayer has built bee health centers in Europe and the United States, and Monsanto’s Beeologics subsidiary is developing technology to fight varroa mites.

None of that matters to the anti-pesticide activists. They are using pressure tactics to make Canada and the United States copy the EU. That would be a huge mistake. Science, not politics, should prevail.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: acriculture; almonds; beekeeping; bees; farming; honey; neonicotinoids; neonics; pesticides

1 posted on 04/05/2014 10:24:38 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

WHAT DO WE WANT?

APIS MELLIFERA JUSTICE?

WHEN DO WE WANT IT?

NOW!


2 posted on 04/05/2014 10:35:30 AM PDT by Organic Panic
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To: Kaslin

“On the bright side”, a lot of almond trees in California have died due to the drought.


3 posted on 04/05/2014 10:37:05 AM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Kaslin

I’ve decided if our neighborhood ever becomes dangerous I am taking up beekeeping.


4 posted on 04/05/2014 10:37:39 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (Obamacare: You can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs.)
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To: Kaslin

I plied this trade for a few years. Loved it immensely, learned a lot. The more I learned about bees, the deeper grew my assurance that there HAS to be a God.
Sorry to see the whole enterprise threatened like it is now.


5 posted on 04/05/2014 10:44:16 AM PDT by Migraine (Diversity is great -- until it happens to YOU..)
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To: Kaslin
bees can come back from California “loaded with mites and every other disease you can think of,” 

Not just the bees.

6 posted on 04/05/2014 10:46:57 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Republican amnesty supporters don't care whether their own homes are called mansions or haciendas.)
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To: Kaslin

As a small beekeeper, having read some on CCD, this article reads like it was authored with someone with an agenda to defend neonicatinoid usage.


7 posted on 04/05/2014 11:05:29 AM PDT by C210N (When people fear government there is tyranny; when government fears people there is liberty)
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To: Kaslin
Bee poop?

I saw this in high school in 1973, and I always think of it when I think of honey!

8 posted on 04/05/2014 11:05:53 AM PDT by Slump Tester (What if I'm pregnant Teddy? Errr-ahh -Calm down Mary Jo, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it)
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To: Slump Tester

If it makes it sound any better, I always thought of it as bee VOMIT!

Better?


9 posted on 04/05/2014 11:18:40 AM PDT by chaosagent (Remember, no matter how you slice it, forbidden fruit still tastes the sweetest!)
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To: DuncanWaring

I live in the Central Valley and we have almond orchards everywhere. I never see an orchard without seeing bee hives in them. It seems most here keep their own bees.


10 posted on 04/05/2014 11:20:59 AM PDT by sheana
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To: Kaslin

“One of America’s earliest food crops – “

Really,almonds are one of America’s earliest food crops ?


11 posted on 04/05/2014 11:47:55 AM PDT by Controlling Legal Authority
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To: Controlling Legal Authority

Really,almonds are one of America’s earliest food crops ?

Not to be confused with the Algores who continue to
produce bitter fruit...


12 posted on 04/05/2014 11:57:31 AM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: C210N
"As a small beekeeper, having read some on CCD, this article reads like it was authored with someone with an agenda to defend neonicatinoid usage."

I am a hobbyist beekeeper and I agree with you. These companies pay big bucks to have someone produce tests with the results skewed the way they want.

Also there is something else to take into consideration....... companies can show that their individual chemical products do not harm bees, but then we can find that a mixture of two or more of these products makes an entirely different chemical that is harmful.

Something is killing bees and it isn't cell phone towers!!!

13 posted on 04/05/2014 12:28:00 PM PDT by Apple Pan Dowdy (... as American as Apple Pie)
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To: Apple Pan Dowdy

It’s a slick article, setting up the pro-nicotinoid points without mentioning it till much later, and then an unabashed defence of the stuff.

Suffice to say there is, elsewhere, TONS of studies, articles, papers, youtubes, whole movies.... Pointing straight at neonicotinoids killing bees.


14 posted on 04/05/2014 12:40:15 PM PDT by C210N (When people fear government there is tyranny; when government fears people there is liberty)
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To: Kaslin
Science, not politics, should prevail.

In this day its hard to know which one is which.

15 posted on 04/05/2014 1:27:19 PM PDT by tbpiper
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To: Apple Pan Dowdy

“Something is killing bees and it isn’t cell phone towers!!!”

Do you think that feeding them corn syrup or sugar has anything to do with it?

https://spikenardfarm.org/the-bees/why-theyre-in-trouble/

I’d like to know where to get bee honey without this practice, is all raw honey free from it?


16 posted on 05/28/2014 1:02:16 PM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: Beowulf9
"Do you think that feeding them corn syrup or sugar has anything to do with it?"

Feeding sugar water in large quantities rather than allowing the hive to keep enough of their own stores for winter, is a bad practice. But certainly not something we do, or any other local beekeepers that we know.

It does become necessary to feed sugar water at certain emergency times..... for instance when we install a new package of bees and they have no stored honey, or when the hive has built up population for spring, then all of a sudden a huge freeze arrives and there are too many bees to live off what is stored. We give them few frames of real honey from another hive, but have to supplement that with sugar water sometimes. But we never feed them corn syrup and we never harvest any honey that is produced while feeding the sugar water.

17 posted on 05/28/2014 1:20:45 PM PDT by Apple Pan Dowdy (... as American as Apple Pie)
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