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The chemical behind the great bee dieoff
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS / ^ | Wednesday, December 30, 2015 | Heather Leibowitz

Posted on 12/30/2015 3:47:03 PM PST by presidio9

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To: MarchonDC09122009
So, like Stinson, you believe that phenylalanine, aspartic acid and methanol are poisonous when consumed in a diet coke but not when they are consumed in a banana, even though the banana contains many times more of the alleged toxic chemicals.

Does that pretty much sum up your understanding of the issue?

Not arguing with idiots on the Internet is advice I should follow more often.

101 posted on 12/31/2015 11:39:01 AM PST by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: Pelham
Mason Bee source

Thanks for this.

102 posted on 12/31/2015 12:15:33 PM PST by presidio9 (Islam is as Islam does.)
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To: Pelham

My yard is awash in Milkweed. I forgot to mention that. It was seeded by blown-in seeds so I created several guarded patches for the caterpillars to feed on. We’ve had a few over the years and my granddaughter has had the opportunity to watch them grow from eggs to caterpillars (they flew away before we could see them).

Unfortunately, former milkweed wild patches along highway roads have been cut down by about 70% so traditional breeding grounds are being eliminated by ignorance.


103 posted on 12/31/2015 1:57:28 PM PST by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: Mase

Interesting about the component parts of aspartame being found in bananas. Do they act as a sweetener in bananas or is there some difference?


104 posted on 12/31/2015 8:25:10 PM PST by Pelham (Muslim immigration...the enemy is inside the wire.)
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To: Wissa
I've noticed a significant decline in honeybees on my fruit trees the past few years, and a related decline in fruit production.

The honey bees stay home when it is cold and we have had some cold springs and summers.

That is why people are getting mason bees. They work during colder weather.

105 posted on 12/31/2015 10:00:12 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
The honey bees stay home when it is cold and we have had some cold springs and summers. That is why people are getting mason bees. They work during colder weather.

The mason bees working in cooler weather is definitely a factor in my making the move, but not the only factor. I've lived at my present location over twenty years and have watched the bees on the fruit trees and bushes each year. Until the past couple of years I'd see a lot of honeybees on my apple tree. I'd certainly see less honeybees on cool days but it blooms over such a long period that there would be some days warm enough for honeybees sometime in that period. Maybe just mid-afternoon many days, but I'd definitely see honeybees on the apple tree while it was blooming.

This past year I didn't see a single one. It wasn't just because it was a colder spring though. I have a couple of plum trees I planted a few years ago. They sometimes bloom a week apart so I miss out on cross-pollination and get practically no fruit. This last year, before the first one quit blooming we had some dandy warm weather and the second plum tree had a quick burst and caught up so they were both blooming at the same time. The weather was definitely warm enough for the honeybees to be out.

I didn't see a single honeybee. Not on the apple tree, not on the cherry trees, not on the plum trees.

Loads of honeybees in the late fall coming up to my hummingbird feeder from hives that a beekeeper set up in the summer a half-mile or so away, but none while my fruit trees were blooming. It didn't use to be that way.

I still got some pollination from bumblebees and various other insects, but fruit production was way down from what it used to be.

106 posted on 01/01/2016 7:47:30 AM PST by Wissa (Gone Galt)
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To: Pelham

These same components can also be found in cherries, tomato juice, lima beans and more. To act as a sweetener, they must be bound together in the proper proportions. Aspartame was discovered by accident by a scientist working on a promising therapy for treating ulcers. He licked his finger after touching the Aspartame and found it to be sweet. Years later, the sweetener was finally approved by the FDA and made eating and drinking much easier, and more enjoyable, for diabetics everywhere.


107 posted on 01/01/2016 11:14:24 AM PST by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: Wissa
It can still be the cold weather that is causing the honey bee die off in your area.

During cold weather they are contently in motion to keep the hive warm and that burns up a great deal of energy. If you have any animals in the area (including humans) that may have raided the hive and taken too much of the stored honey you can kill off the hive.

Also a lack of early blooming high nectar flowers can kill off hives of wild bees where bees that are cultivated get fed when there is a lack of wild nectar.

I am planting black locust as both a living fence and to help the bees. Now I can add locust borer to the list of pests I have to fret about.

But masons are a great back up bee and while you don't get the bonus of the honey you also don't have to worry about getting stung.

108 posted on 01/01/2016 4:58:40 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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