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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Bee calamity clarified
Posted by Bob Grant [Entry posted at 24th August 2009 08:45 PM GMT]
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Protecting bees by Marwa Al Rammal [Comment posted 2011-06-24 06:53:59] Hello.....this is right but I want some help plllz send me a message to my email giving me some information about bees disappearing I am making a machine that can attract bees and help them find there way home i had made some equipments and frequency and waves for bees ....Wish you can help me and send me a message fast as possible
thanks The Researcher Marwa Al Rammal Cell phones or Engineered cells by susan hardin [Comment posted 2009-08-30 12:21:23] As soon as genetic engineering is mentioned the cell phone and wifi towers are presented. My bees are exposed to this technology as I live in one of the most populated areas of the country. However they are not exposed to genetically engineered agriculture. honeybees by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-08-29 11:47:00] The following report should explain why the honeybees are having difficulty 'translating' genetic material into funcional proteins that can fight disease, as well as their 'behavioral' tendency to avoid the hive and die away from it.
It's the CELL PHONE and WIFI towers and antennas that are causing CCD among the honeybees. Research into White Nose Fungus among the bats in the northeastern U.S. will likely yield similar findings. LINK SECTION 5: Evidence for Effects on Gene and Protein Expression (Transcriptomic and Proteomic Research) Dr. Xu and Dr. Chen SECTION 6: Evidence for Genotoxic Effects ? RFR and ELF DNA Damage Dr. Lai SECTION 7: Evidence for Stress Response (Stress Proteins) Dr. Blank SECTION 8: Evidence for Effects on Immune Function Dr. Johansson SECTION 9: Evidence for Effects on Neurology and Behavior Dr. Lai Audio Archives - Interviews with Top Researchers: LINK Attitudes to the Health Dangers of Non-Thermal EMFs: LINK Becker Interview: LINK cell phone and wifi towers killing the honey bees? by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-08-29 11:37:50] The immune systems of honey bees are unable to 'translate' because cell phone and wifi tower/antenna 'interference' prevents them from doing so. Please read the Bioinitiative Report below.
Audio Archives - Interviews with Top Researchers: LINK Attitudes to the Health Dangers of Non-Thermal EMFs: LINK Becker Interview: LINK Bioinitiative Report: LINK What kind of noise annoys an oyster? A Calamity! by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-08-28 19:59:11] Dear Sirs or Madams as the case may be:
Thank goodness genetically modified crops and their poisonous pollen have had no impact upon the bees! I notice it receives no attention whatsoever in your report; therefore it must have no impact. QED. BTW, it seems that organic beekeepers have no problems with colony collapse; perhaps because their bees pollinate organic crops rather than GMOs. What a puzzler! Perhaps you could do a study on this as well? Zounds! Viral cassette by susan hardin [Comment posted 2009-08-28 09:57:29] Virus and bacteria are used to genetically engineer commercial agriculture. As a urban beekeeper whose bees are not exposed to commercial agriculture, one has to wonder. If the uptake of E.coli from rapeseed crops to the bee gut has scientifically been proven, why shouldn't we assume that other pathogens of recombinant nature are being passed through agricultural technologies? Bee Calamity Muddled by Queshaun Sudbury [Comment posted 2009-08-26 22:24:31] National Institute of Health published inNature 2006 october 26, its Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee Apis mellifera, "Here we report the genome sequence of the honeybee Apis Mellifera, a key model for social behavior and essential to global ecology through pollination."
The specific biological rationale for utility of new sequence data, the suitability of bees as a model for human health, argued, "instincts and mental health, cognition, immunity and disease, developmental biology, gene ragulation, gerontology, and comparative genomics." Yet, it seems that the epidemiologists have hijacked the debate. Science Magazine, vol 318, 12 October 2007, pp 283-287, discussed the results of a Metagenomic Survey by Diana Cox-Foster, et al., "We used CCD as a model to establish a strategy for investigating epidemics of unexplained infectious diseases." id, p286. Responding to a comment on their report, Cox-Foster characterized CCD, "CCD is characterized by a rapid loss of adult bees; excess brood, in all stages, abaondoned in the hive; low levels of varroa; and a lack of dead bees in or near the hive." Science Magazine. vol 319, Letter, p725, 8 February 2008. The behavioral aspects of CCD have been ignored, outright dismissed. Why? Santiago Ramon y Cajal, in his Advice for a Young Investigator, would call it politics. Perhaps. Queshaun Sudbury Phyletic Research Group Corporation Observation by ROBERT DODGE [Comment posted 2009-08-26 08:35:52] I don't hold any particular position on the cause of CCD, but the "interesting" observation that there is no gene response to either pesticides or infection supports neither position. The rather weak suggestion that multiple viruses must have "overwhelmed" the immune system is little better than a proposal that high pesticide challenges "overwhelmed" the gene response. I agree with the previous poster that perhaps a more rigorous epidemiological approach should be added to the investigation along with the molecular one, particularly if more than one agent in combination is suspected. Question by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-08-26 01:49:30] If I understood corretly, when a colony is hit by CCD, the dead bees are not found in the hive. I.e. they die somwhere outside the hive.
How can Berenbaum's findings account for that? Woud she suggest that the arduous flight-activity outside the hive acts like "the kick in the head" to a human suffering from a severe gunshot? N J data by willaim coniglio [Comment posted 2009-08-25 20:18:07] This study may illuminate the physiological mode of action for the malady called CCD. The study does not shed light on the causative agent or agents of "CCD" yet the author implies the involvement of multiple agents. Supportive evidence needed for this assertion.
Let me add information as a scientist and beekeeper in New Jersey. As a member of the executive board of the New Jersey Beekeepers Association, I am not aware of a single case of "CCD" among non migratory, non pollinator urban, suburban and rural beekeepers in New Jersey. The only cases a "CCD" I know about have occured among beekeepers who are commercial pollinators, especially those who are migratory. Since the introduction of varroa and Israeli virus predate the occurrence of "CCD" reason dictates that they can not be causative. The causative agent is one of the variables unique to migratory beekeepers who pollinate commercial crops. Movement of hives is stressive but predates the "CCD" epidemic. Contaminated high fructose corn syrup and chemicals used in commercial crop production may be involved. The beekeepers who experienced the "CCD" epidemic have provided this kind of information. It is time to use the epidemiologic approach to direct the "CCD" investigation, if we want a solution. But is it right? by Hugh Fletcher [Comment posted 2009-08-25 11:49:54] Yet another explanation for bee colony collapse, but is it better than the others? Why should several viruses suddenly have this effect? One virus I could believe, but a collection? If there are many viruses they are secondary, not the cause.
I will await confirmation. Additional information by Suzanne Hubbard [Comment posted 2009-08-25 11:04:05] For more information, articles with links to scientific references and reports are also posted at the USDA Agricultural Research Service web site:
"Honey Bees with Colony Collapse Disorder Show their Genes" (LINK "Pathogen Loads Higher in Bee Colonies Suffering from Colony Collapse Disorder" (LINK "Bee-Killing Parasite's Genome Sequenced" (LINK "Survey Reports Latest Honey Bee Losses" (LINK Comment on this blog |