Albert Einstein made the statement ” If honey bees become extinct, human society will follow in four years.” He was speaking in regard to the symbiotic relationship of all life on the planet. All part of a huge interconnected ecosystem, each element playing a role dependant on many other elements all working in concert creating the symphony of life. Should any part of the global body suffer, so does the whole body.
Many people would be surprised to know that 90% of the feral (wild) bee population in the United States has died out. Recent studies in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands have shown that bee diversity is down 80 percent in the sites researched, and that “bee species are declining or have become extinct in Britain.” The studies also revealed that the numbers of wildflowers that depend on pollination have dropped by 70 percent. Which came first, the decline in wildflowers or the decline in pollinators, has yet to be determined. If bees continue to die off so would the crops they support and with that would ensue major economic disruption and possibly famine.
In the US, bee keepers are experiencing unprecedented die offs of bees some losing as much as 80% of their colonies. Commercial beekeepers in 22 states have reported deaths of tens of thousands of honeybee colonies. So far the cause remains unexplained and somewhat mysterious. It is being called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) and is causing agricultural honeybees nationwide to abandon their hives and disappear and raising worries about crops that need bees for pollination. It’s a kind of mass suicide in the bee world. “There have been cases where there have been these die-offs of bees before, but we have never seen it to this level,” said Maryann Frazier, a Pennsylvania State University entomologist. “One operation after another is collapsing.”
Bees have done quite well for millions of years, in the last 60 years that began to change. In recent years, beekeepers have been losing 25 percent of their hives each winter. Thirty years ago, the rate was 5 percent to 10 percent, said Keith Tignor, the state apiarist for Virginia.
The unusual phenomenon was first noticed by eastern beekeepers starting last fall. Researchers, including some connected with the Penn State University College of Agricultural Sciences, have identified some of the possible contributors, but have not yet found a single cause. Initial studies on bee colonies experiencing the die-offs have revealed a large number of disease organisms, with most being “stress-related” diseases but without any one agent as the culprit. Climate chaos and extreme weather seem to be a major factor.
It is hard to tell if wild honey bee populations have been affected by the CCD disorder because Varroa mites have “pretty much decimated the wild honey bee population over the past years,” said Maryann Frazier of The Pennsylvania State University Department of Entomology. “This has become a highly significant, yet poorly understood problem that threatens the pollination industry and the production of commercial honey in the United States… Because the number of managed honeybee colonies is less than half of what it was 25 years ago, states such as Pennsylvania can ill afford these heavy losses.”
Dennis van Engelsdorp, acting state apiarist with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture said “Every day, you hear of another operator, It’s just causing so much death so quickly that it’s startling.”
Lee Miller, director of the Beaver County extension office, said the deaths appear to be stress-related, but that stress could come from several sources. Dennis van Engelsdorp of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture said that initial studies found a large number of disease organisms present, with no one disease being identified as the culprit. And while studies and surveys have found a few common management factors among beekeepers with affected hives, no common environmental agents or chemicals have been identified.
University of California Davis entomologist Eric Mussen specializes in bees. He thinks the answer lies in last summer’s lack of wild flowers, nationwide. Janet Katz, a beekeeper in Chester, NJ, says the weather is having a major impact, “The weather last season was not cooperative,” she said. “Over the course of the season it was too wet, too dry, too hot and too cold, all at the wrong times.” Bees store honey every autumn — a hive needs 60 pounds to survive the winter — but with this year’s warm weather, they ate a lot, and beekeepers had to supplement with sugar syrup.
Support the beekeepers and pray!
bee, loss, pagal, music in art
Comments
beautiful colors, especially the focused lighting…
Thank you, Larry. The focus is on the bee to remind everyone of the importance of the bee to all of us.
– Judi Taylor
OMG.. OMG.. once in a while.. ms..Judy.. you bring out the ‘essence’ of a subject that has been examined a bazillion times.. This is precious and I want to make the Plight of the bumble bee Icon this.. NOW.
IT IS DONE.. YOU ARE THE ESSENCE OF THE PLIGHT OF THE BB GROUP!
Thank you Lina. This is something that I have been feeling very strongly recently. You are sweet to allow my piece to represent the cause and I am indeed honored.
– Judi Taylor
This is what our bee group is about.. so if you want to put this in a group forum.. that would be most appreciated..xoxo
Huh? I would love to … tell me how. Call me later, ok?
– Judi Taylor
A beauty!
Such a beautiful image Judi, love the dark tones and the ‘fairly like’ wings…..
Alarming statistics, hope praying is enough! x
I love it, this is gorgeous Judi ;-)
A lovely shot Judi and a very interesting read, thank you.
I truly believe that most of the problems of this world have a lot to do with the attitudes & emotions of the human factor of nature, the people, when they are stressed out their vibrations emit stress into the ethers which small creatures, such as bees, pick up on and are then also affected by … everything is from within to without, including how the world develops, or deteriorates, with the movement of energy emitted from within to without by the governing population within nature, in this instance, the human population … who are under considerable stress in this world at present … too many stressing about poverty, which brings on more poverty, stressing about wars, which brings on more wars … the emotions of the thoughts of such ways are just begetting more of those ways through worry … when will the scientists realise that all moves in this world as one … so when one element suffers, all will suffer, eventually.
Wow, I came here actually from CJ Lewis’ link in her journal. I had no idea that it was that bad.
Surprisingly there is no mention of the effect of herbicides or genetically altered seed crops.
Wouldn’t these be one of the first things researched?
Great article.
Symbiotic indeed. No life more precious in the over all scheme.The only hindrance I can conclude is that of human arrogance because here is most of mankind perceiving themselves as more valuable than the least of God’s creations.
Great capture Judith and SO nice to see you again.