Ab2
Ab2
@ab2

A STING IN THE TAIL

user image 2008-06-16
By: Ab2
Posted in:

<p>I`m sorry that this is such a long article and that it has nothing to do with music.&nbsp; In a way it does though, I adore the "humm" of bees...&nbsp; It needs to be read by as many people as possible.&nbsp; It affects us all....</p>
<p>Here`s a link&nbsp;that Zest sent me too, I really hope that some of you are interested enough to check it out...Here`s the link and what he said...My sentiments entirely...</p>
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<p>If you are serious about passing along the message in your blog..please take a listen to the recording I made of Dr. David Suzuki on May 3 2008 at the Toronto Brick Works on the topic you mention here.</p>
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<p>I recorded it with my Sony voice recorder</p>
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<p>If you want to include in your blog as an addendum, please do. The link is good till Saturday then it expires.</p>
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<p><a href="https://download.yousendit.com/BA0282A73A6241EA" target="_blank"><span style="color: #ff9900;">https://download.yousendit.com/BA0282A73A6241EA</span></a></p>
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<p>In Dr. Suzuki's speech, he says if pollinators die off humans die..if humans die, pollinators still continue....there's something to think about eh?</p>
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<div class="attr">www.newsweek.com - 14.06.2008 15:52</div>
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<h1 class="title_normal">Stung By Bees</h1>
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<p><strong><span style="font-size: small; color: #666666;">A mysterious ailment of honeybees threatens a trillion-dollar industry and an essential source of nutrition.</span></strong></p>
<p>For 3,000 years, farmers in China's Sichuan province pollinated their fruit trees the old-fashioned way: they let the bees do it. Flowers produce nectar that attracts bees, which inadvertently transfer sticky grains of pollen from one flower to another, fertilizing them so they bear fruit. When China rapidly expanded its pear orchards in the 1980s, it stepped up its use of pesticides, and this age-old system of pollination began to unravel. Today, during the spring, the snow-white pear blossoms blanket the hills, but there are no bees to carry the pollen. Instead, thousands of villagers climb through the trees, hand-pollinating them by dipping "pollination sticks"&mdash;brushes made of chicken feathers and cigarette filters&mdash;into plastic bottles of pollen and then touching them to each of the billions of blossoms.</p>
<p>China's use of human bees is only one of many troubling signs of an agricultural crisis in the making. Bees the world over have been dying from a mysterious syndrome termed colony collapse disorder, or CCD. U.S. beekeepers lost 35 percent of their hives this winter, after losing 30 percent the previous year. Similar but less well-publicized losses have occurred in countries as far-flung as Canada, Brazil, India and China, as well as throughout Europe. A recent survey of wild-bee populations in Belgium and France found that 25 percent of species have declined in the past 30 years. Several species of bumblebees common in the United States as recently as 1990 have disappeared. In Britain, the British Beekeepers Association has warned that honeybees could disappear entirely from the island by 2018, along with &pound;165 million worth of apples, pears, canola and other crops they pollinate.</p>
<p>The threat is vast. Most crops&mdash;87 of the world's 115 most important ones&mdash;require pollination to develop fruits, nuts and seeds, says agroecologist Alexandra-Maria Klein at Germany's University of G&ouml;ttingen. Those crops account for about $1 trillion of the approximately $3 trillion in annual sales of agricultural produce worldwide. They also provide 35 percent of the calories consumed by humans each year, and most of the vitamins, minerals and antioxidants. Every blueberry, cherry, apple, grapefruit, avocado, squash, cucumber, macadamia nut and almond depends on the ministrations of a bee for its existence. Even crops such as lettuce and broccoli need insect pollination to produce seed for the following year's supply.</p>
<p>Colony-collapse disorder is characterized by the sudden collapse of a full-strength hive in a matter of weeks, with adults leaving the hive and not returning, until the hive is deserted. "I found colonies that had just stopped living," says Borje Svensson, a Swedish beekeeper. "They had given up life without any sign of struggle." No one knows what causes it, but theories abound. U.S. researchers believe a previously little-known disease called Israeli acute paralysis virus is involved, while Spanish researchers suspect a fungus called Nosema. When France lost a third of its bees in the 1990s, beekeepers blamed Imidacloprid, a new pesticide that had been used on the sunflower crop, a honeybee favorite. France banned the use of Imidacloprid on sunflowers in 1999 and expanded the ban to other crops in 2004, yet its bees have not recovered. Despite this ambiguous evidence, many beekeepers around the world continue to blame Imidacloprid&mdash;the best-selling pesticide in the world, with annual sales of nearly $860 million. Others have pointed fingers at malefactors ranging from cell phones to genetically modified crops, with little evidence. The leading theory is that colony collapse is caused by a combination of viruses, pesticides, the parasitic varroa mite, drought and stress triggered by commercial colonies' overwork and poor nutrition.</p>
<p>The meta-culprit is the shift to large-scale agriculture. When most farms were small family affairs, pollinators came from nearby wildlands. But the growth of massive industrial farms has put most crops out of the reach of wild insects. So farmers need to supply artificially large numbers of bees to pollinate their fields in the spring. The European honeybee is the only pollinator that fits the bill: adapted for dense living in tree hollows, it takes naturally to man-made wooden hives, making it the only bee that comes in convenient boxes of 50,000 that can be trucked from crop to crop. Wild insects such as bumblebees and tropical flies still account for 15 percent of pollination, including crops such as cacao (chocolate). Yet these wild insects are declining worldwide due to loss of habitat and increased pesticide use. Farmers the world over now rely almost completely on the European honeybee, one of 20,000 species of bees. Many beekeepers now make more money from pollination fees than from honey production.</p>
<p>The lack of bees has reached crisis proportions in California's Central Valley. Almonds, for years the most profitable crop in the state, expanded in acreage from 550,000 in 2005 to 615,000 in 2007, and are expected to reach 800,000 by 2010. These high-density plantations require more than two hives per acre&mdash;which means a bumper crop of almonds will soon call for nearly 2 million hives of bees. That's as many bees as currently exist in the entire United States, yet just a third of what existed 60 years ago.</p>
<p>Paying for those bees has sapped almond growers' profits. Joe Traynor, a "pollination broker" who matches almond growers who need bees with beekeepers looking to rent out their hives in the Central Valley, has watched the cost of pollination soar in recent years. "When I started in 1960, the price for honeybee rentals was $3 per hive. In 2004 it was $60 per hive. This year it was $160 to $180 per hive." Those runaway prices have made pollination expenses spiral to 20 percent of a California almond farmer's annual budget&mdash;more than fertilizer, water or even labor. In 2008, for the first time, the price for almonds fell below growers' cost of production. "They're really caught in the middle," says Traynor. "It's getting to be more and more of a hardship."</p>
<p>Because crops are now global commodities, their prices are set by the world market; farmers can't easily pass on cost increases to consumers. Instead, as their profits disappear, they go out of business or switch to more profitable crops. That reckoning day may soon come for almonds and many other bee-dependent crops. According to Bernard Vaissi&egrave;re, a pollination specialist with the French National Institute for Agricultural Research, we wouldn't even know if we were currently experiencing reduced yields due to suboptimal pollination, because there is no previous baseline to measure against. "Insect pollination has been totally overlooked as a production factor in Europe until very recently," he says. "Pollinators were taken for granted, just like the air and the light. So if there is a yield loss, it will be attributed to anything but pollination deficit. But there has been a definite increase in pollination-rental fees in many parts of France." Prices of many of the major insect-pollinated crops have soared in recent years. Farmers manage to get their crops pollinated, but at greater expense.</p>
<p>Governments have done little to solve the problem. In June 2007 the U.S. House of Representatives held an emergency hearing on the status of pollinators in North America and allotted $5 million to honeybee research in the ensuing farm bill, but the funding was cut a year later. Earlier this month the U.S. Department of Agriculture made $4 million available to a consortium of universities for research. On April 22, calling on the British government to provide &pound;8 million in emergency funding, British Beekeepers Association president Tim Lovett said, "CCD has not yet crossed the channel from Europe, but we are urging the government that it needs to be prepared should this happen. Does the government want the nation to go without honey on their toast, not have homegrown strawberries to go with cream, and even put their own crusade for the public to eat five portions of fresh fruit and vegetables at risk?" Jeff Rooker, Britain's Food and Farming minister, responded that the government didn't have the funds to help.</p>
<p>That leaves beekeepers scrambling to keep the world in fruits and vegetables. "We can't stand another bug or virus or pest," says Mark Brady, president of the American Honey Producers Association. "Right now the industry is like crystal. It's that fragile. One slip and it will shatter."</p>
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<p>&copy; 2008 Newsweek, Inc.</p>
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Ab1
06/19/08 02:52:21AM @ab1:
beautiful tsar.. sounds like all the earlier songs i wrote.. I hate to be a pessimist but it's hard not to be now.. peace of mind? hard for a member of mankind.. :-)
The DEEP
06/18/08 05:07:31AM @the-deep:
Margot, i am very happy that you posted this message- blog. It is truly alarming. I have been hearing bits about this . I know you care- i also care- but feel somewhat helpless to turn the tide our planet is facing. - wow,, our grandchildren may one day hate us , for ruining their planet.

Please carry on Margot, being who you are and how you are. I know people love you here.

shane for The DEEP

Ab2
06/18/08 03:21:24AM @ab2:
Thanks so much for caring, Joe, Will, Paul and Nigel...xxxx True "friends of the earth"..xxxx

I really don`t know what we can do to change things..

Last week I was admiring an old lady`s garden in our village, the plants looked so healthy, then I saw the ground scattered with green/blue "slug" pellets...Your so right Nigel, "forgive them lord, for they know not what they do"...

I pick the little snails from our pathway and put them on the garden so they don`t get stamped on, we all have to live...All have the right to live...

Peace n love...

Luca Wulf
06/17/08 02:37:14PM @huge-artist:
Yet another sad fact,to a world that seems by and large drowning in apathy due to the constant bombardment of facts.
It is as if,the whole human race has become resigned to be helpless in the face of issues that are not their problem.
So short sighted that they can not see how it all relates to their own little bubble of reality.
What is to be done with us?
As the decades pass I begin to wonder.
When history writes what it has to write,I hope that it will remember us few who tried to tell the many.
"Not on my watch,not in my name"
From war to Hive collpase,from starvation to polution,there is one common element,but that one element,although self aware,is not "Whole" aware.
Although I am far from religious,I am reminded of a phrase:
"Forgive them father,for they know not what they do"

Nigel.

ZEST
06/17/08 11:59:18AM @zest-radio-show:
Hi Margot,

Thank you for this blog, and for including the recording I made of Dr. David Suzuki speaking about the importance of pollinators to our eco system and survival.

Hopefully more people will take notice and try their very best to help. There are difficult transitions the human race must endeavour to make so as to ensure the survival of this planet, and ourselves.

Try and keep your attitude positive, eventhough it is a disturbing issue we are relaying to our fellow compatriates...but...someone has to bring this to everyone's attention.

Thank you again for caring deeply about many issues that do and should concern us all.

Peace,

ZEST

Ab2
06/17/08 11:32:55AM @ab2:
Thanks Zest for the link...I`ve yet to check it out as we`ve only just returned home...Oh yes, I`m very serious...devastated you could say...I`ve known for a long while there was a problem, but one so serious is a catastrophy for the whole human race...
will
06/17/08 05:03:28AM @will-carroll:
"Colony-collapse disorder "...well that doesn't sound good.
makes you a little(lot) sad to hear of such things.
thanks for sharing...
later down an worry free...

Ab1
06/17/08 02:58:39AM @ab1:
I don't know what to say.. this is yet another major crisis threatening our very survival.. perhaps the most serious of all at the moment.. I think it should be the next song title madness BIRDS AND BEES.. then we can send/post all the songs to various sites and agencies in hope that this apparently downplayed subject will get the attention it so urgently needs.. please take the time to read it folks.. preapre to be upset.. cheers..
Ab2
06/18/08 05:59:30AM @ab2:
Shane, I`m so glad you`re an "earth warrior", :-) this is a quote from what you say..."I know you care- i also care- but feel somewhat helpless to turn the tide our planet is facing. - wow,, our grandchildren may one day hate us , for ruining their planet." Shane, I have 4 grandchildren. I can remember when the eldest now almost 13, was around 2 years old, we walked along our lane together and I showed him a slug...It was huge, had a jet black back and bright orange stomach, I told him how beautiful it was as it slid along on a silver trail....I hope my words stayed with him for surely that is the only way to make the next generation aware of nature and the beauty in all things...

I`m by no means an angel and have to admit that I slap mosquitos when they bite...I`m not sure how to deal with that fact, am I as guilty as the people who spread slug pellets on their gardens? Maybe more so as I am supposedly "aware". killing is killing after all...A very sobering thought...

Peace n love Shane...xxxx Mags

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