I've been feeling some pressure to write about the great bee disappearance even though I don't really know too much about it, and the fact that the mainstream media is all over it kind of turns me off. I do feel like my role is to straighten people out about the hype, and to correct some important misconceptions. The phenomenon is spooky, because the bees that are disappearing are just disappearing. They aren't dropping dead in their hives, they are flying away and leaving the hives empty.
Anyway, important things to know: We are talking about honeybees, semidomestic insects native to Eurasia that have been kept for honey production for millennia. Not any of the other several thousand species of bees, wasps, hornets, etc. (But then again, if those disappeared, it wouldn't be as obvious, because people don't keep them in semi-captive colonies.) So if you are worried about how wild plants in North America are going to reproduce without honeybees, don't, because those wild plants will be pollinated by whatever was pollinating them for the millions of years they existed before honeybees were introduced.
The big problem (and the reason that the corporate controlled media would bother to cover a story about an insect species' decline) is that honeybees are used to pollinate commercial crops. Hives are put in to trucks and driven hundreds of miles to farms, and allowed out to pollinate fields of melons, or orchards of plums or whatever crop needs a pollinator to 'bear fruit.' These large scale beekeepers are the ones who are finding big chunks of their (flock? herd?) animal collections simply empty. They are also the ones putting their bees through the stress of a ride on a truck, they are the ones feeding their bees high fructose corn syrup to make up for the fact that many crops are poor nectar producers, and they are ones exposing their bees to crops that have been given insecticides that make all parts of the plant poisonous including the nectar and pollen.
"Why are the bees declining?" begins to sound a little coy, if not naive. (If only someone would write a groundbreaking book about the dangers of widespread insecticide use...)
If you continue to be curious about the missing bees, please read this article: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=1829
Anyway, important things to know: We are talking about honeybees, semidomestic insects native to Eurasia that have been kept for honey production for millennia. Not any of the other several thousand species of bees, wasps, hornets, etc. (But then again, if those disappeared, it wouldn't be as obvious, because people don't keep them in semi-captive colonies.) So if you are worried about how wild plants in North America are going to reproduce without honeybees, don't, because those wild plants will be pollinated by whatever was pollinating them for the millions of years they existed before honeybees were introduced.
The big problem (and the reason that the corporate controlled media would bother to cover a story about an insect species' decline) is that honeybees are used to pollinate commercial crops. Hives are put in to trucks and driven hundreds of miles to farms, and allowed out to pollinate fields of melons, or orchards of plums or whatever crop needs a pollinator to 'bear fruit.' These large scale beekeepers are the ones who are finding big chunks of their (flock? herd?) animal collections simply empty. They are also the ones putting their bees through the stress of a ride on a truck, they are the ones feeding their bees high fructose corn syrup to make up for the fact that many crops are poor nectar producers, and they are ones exposing their bees to crops that have been given insecticides that make all parts of the plant poisonous including the nectar and pollen.
"Why are the bees declining?" begins to sound a little coy, if not naive. (If only someone would write a groundbreaking book about the dangers of widespread insecticide use...)
If you continue to be curious about the missing bees, please read this article: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=1829
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Date: 2007-06-16 11:43 am (UTC)And they sting and make me swell up. Hence my mild phobia of the bloody things.
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Date: 2007-06-16 12:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 01:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 01:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 02:53 pm (UTC)I think this line says it all Anyone who’s ever taken a cat to the vet, much less cross-country, knows that most animals do not like car rides. Now imagine taking a flying insect across the country in the back of a truck, where it’s unable to fly and stays in complete darkness. Bees, which function almost entirely by smell, spend days on end inundated with car exhaust and diesel fumes.
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Date: 2007-06-16 03:16 pm (UTC)People also seemed to get into a panic about not having enough food. 1) We are now a net food importer (for the first time since the James River Colony... That tells ya something right there), so we won't be running out of food any time soon. 2) Many crop plants are anemophilous, or pollinated by wind. I spoke to a bee keeper friend of mine who doesn't seem to be too worried about all of this and actually sees it as a good sign--that perhaps the large commercial bee operations may be replaced by smaller, local ones that can promote organic use of their bees and further perpetuate the local foods movement. (There's an idea for you to write about: Local foods vs. organic food--if you had to pick, which should it be?)
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Date: 2007-06-16 03:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 03:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 03:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 03:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 04:24 pm (UTC)I've worked for corporate-owned papers and I currently work for an independantly-owned paper, one of the last indy dailies left. I can't speak for other media, but in print, content control from a corporate owner is so rare that it's considered remarkable and outrageous, and people are known to quit over it.
The real problem with corporate-owned media is money. Big corporations want to make a lot of it. Newspapers, however, are not big money makers and never have been. A paper that's running a 20 % profit margin is doing very well, but from a corporate standpoint it's doing so poorly that layoffs may be in the works.
So the papers cut corners. They can't affort to pay for foreign bureaus. They can't afford to send reporters to breaking stories out of state. They can't afford to keep a book section, or a science section, or a music critic. So these things get axed.
So you end up with reporters whose job it is to cover business, politics, and sports, because these things sell the most papers to the most people.
Now, if a large group of insect in the wild disappeared, I and many of my colleagues would find it fascinating, but few of us would have the opportunity to write it because it doesn't fit in the beats that were left after the cut backs.
So the bee story gets shoehorned in to "business," a surviving beat.
Corporate news IS a bad thing, but not for the reason you imply.
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Date: 2007-06-16 04:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 04:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 05:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 05:39 pm (UTC)There doesn't have to be an explicit control of media content--just the dictum that the content has to sell papers is controlling enough.
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Date: 2007-06-16 05:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 06:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 06:50 pm (UTC)I've heard that these sort of 'collapses' happen alot in the insect world.. it's just that the bees have gotten alot of press because of their commercial value and lets face it, they're cute.
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Date: 2007-06-16 06:51 pm (UTC)I'm always reminded of this movement at the college my partner works at. The institution purchased an old building downtown (a dying downtown in a small community near Columbus, Ohio) and is turning it into a functional community building with available storage and kitchens that are up to FDA codes. Local farmers will be able to come to this location, store their goods, make their products, and then sell them to local businesses. The problem often was that big buyers like grocery store chains wouldn't sell their products (jams, jellies, etc.) because it hadn't been made in a kitchen that was up to FDA codes. So now the college is facilitating this new way for people to move their product from field to plate and also help the locals begin to think about where their food really comes from. It's truly fascinating.
http://rurallife.kenyon.edu/FFT/index.html
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Date: 2007-06-16 07:06 pm (UTC)Now, if only I can convince my roommates to actually get up early in the morning on Saturday to go...
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Date: 2007-06-16 07:12 pm (UTC)Part of the problem that we're not entirely certain what's causing the elevated loss of bees. I mean, yeah, what Urbpan said concerning pesticides and the stress of moving, etc are part of it, but a lot of research is focused on a cause; there's been very little work (I'm aware of) on finding the synergistic causes. I highly doubt any particular element is to blame, but combinations of issues.
And, Urbpan, thanks for clearing up some of the misconceptions on the subject (such as the fact that it's only Apis mellifera affected, and that there are millions of other pollinators).
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Date: 2007-06-16 07:20 pm (UTC)Unfortunatley, the local grocery stores are not very helpful to our local producers, causing them to lose a lot of crop. They won't put in orders for large quantities of produce early enough for the producers to harvest the orders and are too willing to go to imported products for lower costs (and generally quality), resulting in producers not knowing if an order will even be placed. I'm glad I'm not trying to make a living in agriculture :P
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Date: 2007-06-16 07:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 08:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 11:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-17 07:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-17 07:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-19 03:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-19 03:48 pm (UTC)Also getting in touch with them will encourage Kenyon that there's interest in their Food for Thought campaign and the commercial kitchen.
Best of luck in your efforts!
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Date: 2007-06-19 03:56 pm (UTC)http://rurallife.kenyon.edu/FFT/Buckeye.html