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Archive for the ‘Ecological and Public Health Crisis’ Category

Sun Makes History: First Spotless Month in a Century

Posted by seumasach on September 2, 2008

showInitialOdiogoReadNowFrame (‘42049’, ‘12823’, 290, 0);Michael Asher(blog)

Daily Tech

1st September


The record-setting surface of the sun. A full month has gone by without a single spot (Source: Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO))

Sunspot activity of the past decade. Over the past year, SIDC has continually revised its predictions downward (Source: Solar Influences Data Center)

Geomagnetic solar activity for the past two decades. The recent drop corresponds to the decline in sunspots. (Source: Anthony Watts)

A chart of sunspot activity showing two prior solar minima, along with heightened activity during the 20th century (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Drop in solar activity has potential effect for climate on earth.

The sun has reached a milestone not seen for nearly 100 years: an entire month has passed without a single visible sunspot being noted.

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Global cooling gains momentum among scientists

Posted by smeddum on August 29, 2008

Aug 25, 2008 9:40 AM, By Elton Robinson
Farm Press Editorial Staff

Two weeks ago, after writing about the possibility that the Earth may actually be entering a cooling phase, I braced myself for a torrent of icy missives from the global warming crowd suggesting that the heat must have fried my noggin.

By the way, it is very difficult to discuss global cooling in the midst of a summer when temperatures are hovering around 100 degrees and crops are wilting. As one friend and colleague from the sweltering Southwest noted after reading the column, “Please send some of that cooling this way.”

However, one response opened my eyes to the growing community of global warming skeptics out there, most of them merited scientists. I thought it might be worth presenting their thoughts — a little equal time if you will. Marc Marona, a global warming skeptic who works for the U.S. Senate Committee on Environmental and Public Works, sent me these excerpts from a U.S. Senate report. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: , , | 3 Comments »

Bees disappearing, bring on the fruit bats

Posted by smeddum on August 26, 2008

Pollinator Specialists To Consider Responses To Bee Hive Collapse Crisis
Written by Imperial Valley News

From the sublime to the ridiculous, there is a valid assumption that the bees are on their way out, but can they really be replaced by fruit bats? Bats themselves are under threat of extinction and do pollinate but they are several million short when it comes to the massive pollination tasks of bees. Including bumblebees ( BBC 2001) and here MSNBC(2007). Yet again there is an eerie ignorance in both articles of the role played by magnetite in bees navigation.

Tuesday, 26 August 2008
Sacramento, California – With the widespread issue of hive collapse affecting agriculture around the world, CDFA Secretary A.G. Kawamura is promoting and supporting the Native Pollinators In Agriculture Work Group, which is conducting a field tour of working farms in Yolo County on Wednesday, August 27, 2008.

Secretary Kawamura is working with the project’s steering committee as it examines real world opportunities to enhance pollination services and profitability with native pollinators, such as native bumblebees and other bees native to California; some moths; and even fruit bats. Notably, honeybees are not native to California. Read the rest of this entry »

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Do worry, bees unhappy-Two authors plead for habitat preservation as they contemplate the crisis in our hives

Posted by seumasach on August 26, 2008

“Schacker says there’s a proven fix for CCD. When the French government stubbornly ignored the initial findings against imidacloprid, irate beekeepers protested and the use of that insecticide was suspended. When farmers stopped using imidacloprid on their crops, the bees that pollinated those same crops returned in great numbers. Colony collapse disorder averted.”

Great efforts are being made to justify the latest “official cause ” of CCD i.e. pesticides, in ways which are , perhaps, not entirely truthful. Compare the above claim with these below:

“Selon les derniers chiffres de l’AFSSA (Agence Francaise de Securite Sanitaire des Aliments) a paraître dans le prochain magazine Valeurs Vertes, les colonies d’abeilles sont en partie decimees dans 14 departements francais. Deux ans apres l’imbroglio politico-mediatique sur les abeilles et l’interdiction de pesticides, les abeilles meurent toujours.”(16th July, 2006, futura-sciences)

[According to the latest figures of the AFSSA(French Health and Safety Agency) to be published in the next issue of Valeurs Vertes, bee colonies are in serious decline in 14 departnents. Two years after the media controversy over bees and the banning of pesticides, the bees are still dying.](futura-sciences)

“The banning in 2005 of two potent pesticides used on sunflower and corn crops, suspected of killing off the bees, appeared to have stemmed the massive die offs and reversed nearly a decade of declining honey harvests.

But end-of-winter mortality rates have shot up once again, with up to 60 percent of some hives missing in action.’(The Peninsula)

A Spring Without Bees: How Colony Collapse Disorder Has Endangered Our Food Supply

by Michael Schacker
The Lyons Press,
292 pages, $27.50

I live in a rural Saskatchewan town so anachronistically hooked on Roundup that almost every property bears the scorched earth of its handiwork. Our town administrator even pens a bossy column in our local newspaper every spring that urgently reminds us of our civic duty: kill all dandelions! Those who don’t maintain their lawns (and gardens) risk fines and scorn.

My eco-friendly partner and I hand-weed our dandelions and seed wildflowers (weeds) right on our front lawn. During our first summer here, we were cited for non-compliant long grass and weeds and the town administrator threatened to give us a fine. We cut the taller grass in the back, but refused to buy pesticides or pull the wildflowers. Guess whose garden is abundant with native bees, birds, bats, butterflies and wasps?

Read the rest of this entry »

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Butterflies scarce after two wet summers

Posted by seumasach on August 25, 2008

“A bad summer’ is a bit of an understatement I would say: there are just no, or next to no, butterflies, bees, beetles and hardly any birds. So, finally, after several million years of evolution and surviving the biblical deluge they have succumbed to a bit of heavy rain. It’s amazing we’ve got this far really and I suppose we should, at least, be grateful for that. At risk of being bores we at ITNT continue to point out that what is really new about the last twenty years is the proliferation of RF EM radiation, fraudulently claimed to be safe in contrast to ionising radiation(see our RH column).

Michael McCarthy

Independent

25th August, 2008

Britain’s butterflies are going through their worst summer for nearly half a century, a leading conservationist believes. Matthew Oates, conservation adviser to the National Trust, says the torrential downpours of summer 2007 had a knock-on effect on 2008, wiping out many eggs and caterpillars that would have become this year’s adults.

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Empowering Cuba to Save More African Lives

Posted by smeddum on August 24, 2008

African Diaspora: Empowering Cuba to Save More African Lives
Rastafarispeaks.com

By Obi Egbuna
August 23, 2008

The bravery and fervor Cuban Revolutionaries have displayed since time immemorial, from Jose Marti (whom Fidel Castro affectionately refers to as the Apostle of the revolution) and General Antonio Maceo to Che Guevara and Vilma Espin, have always been an inspiration to those who truly love freedom and justice. This passion for world peace stems from the revolutionary values which are at the core of Cuban society. Often times, the world has seen how willing Cubans are to give their lives and resources in pursuit of freedom and justice-such as they did at the US led Bay of Pigs invasion of 1961,and in Angola, Mozambique and Guinee Bissau. A more current example of this courage are the 5 Cuban patriots, who are illegally imprisoned in US jails, because they decided to risk their lives to prevent further acts of naked aggression and terrorism against their beloved homeland, by the counter revolutionary Cuban forces in Miami who are openly aligned with the Bush administration. It is quite interesting that despite this rich history of sacrifice, Commandante Fidel Castro has humbly indicated on many occasions that the greatest army ever assembled in Cuba, is that of the medical brigades. These professional and well trained brigades have many times represented their country patriotically not only at home but throughout the world. Read the rest of this entry »

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Healthy Honey Bees Is Goal of Multi-Institutional Research Team

Posted by seumasach on August 23, 2008

“There could be a lot of things that make bees forget where they live and not return to the hive,” Hunt said.

He seemingly forgot to mention the most obvious one, EM radiation which has been known to have a disorientating effect on bees, and other species, since the 1970s when Warnke and others began their studies on this question.

Ascribe

20th August, 2008

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Aug. 20 (AScribe Newswire) — A combination of pathogens, pesticides and parasites may underlie such a massive disappearance of honeybees that agricultural production may be threatened, says a Purdue University researcher.

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Study on sparrows urgently required say experts

Posted by smeddum on August 23, 2008

Study on sparrows urgently required say experts The Hindu
Mumbai (PTI): Voicing concern over the depleting population of sparrows, experts have suggested a census of the bird to prevent its chirping from being lost forever. Read the rest of this entry »

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TV star Jasper slams masts as “criminal”

Posted by seumasach on August 21, 2008

 

Martyn Smith

Halesowen News

12th August, 2008

TV celebrity Jasper Carrott branded a controversial phone mast site in Kingswinford “criminal” after viewing the eyesore for himself.

The comedian called at the High Acres estate to lend his voice to a campaign calling for a water tower which is home to 18 antennae to be pulled down amid health fears.

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Is the Agency Hiding Colony Collapse Disorder Information?

Posted by smeddum on August 20, 2008

Is the Agency Hiding Colony Collapse Disorder Information?
NRDC Forced to Sue to Get Public Records on Bee Mystery commondreams

” The first finding, as explained, is formulated thus by Ulrich Warnke:
Other causes are also discussed, which aim to explain the disappearance of the bees:
Single-crop farming, pesticides, the Varroa mite, mobile apiaries, corroded seeds, too
severe winters, genetically modified plants. It remains uncontested that these also
cause problems. Yet, the fact that for the last two to three years bee death has
appeared rather suddenly and spread across countries, can be explained convincingly
by none of the above mentioned causes. If the bees simply became excessively
weakened and ill, they would have to perish in or in front of the beehive. Yet, in the
case of this particular phenomenon, no sick bees are to be found. (p. 13) ” link below

The reports that no sick bees are to be found outside the nest runs so contrary to the pesticide experience of beekeepers that it ought to be dismissed as the cause of CCD . Pesticides are not friends to the bees and do kill them but the damage that they do is evident in front of the nest. Everything that points to EMF radiation is not even considered by those who catch on to the pesticide threat to the bees.
Officially, the reason given by the USDA that “areas with no cell phone coverage still showed CCD” but they gave no parameters for this decision. Cell phones were also described as “low priority” for further investigation. For instance, it is not reported as a given that bees travel far, beyond 7 kilometers, also what is unclear is the extend and influence of the global communication system known as HAARP. has on electrosmog. There is certainly more room to investigate this phenonomen if the evidence we have given on this website is not sufficient.

WASHINGTON – August 18 – The Natural Resources Defense Council filed a lawsuit today to uncover critical information that the US government is withholding about the risks posed by pesticides to honey bees. NRDC legal experts and a leading bee researcher are convinced that the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has evidence of connections between pesticides and the mysterious honey bee die-offs reported across the country. The phenomenon has come to be called “colony collapse disorder,” or CCD, and it is already proving to have disastrous consequences for American agriculture and the $15 billion worth of crops pollinated by bees every year. Read the rest of this entry »

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Unwelcome visitors cause havoc for bees

Posted by seumasach on August 19, 2008

“While Lovett says a disease being carried by the Varrao is a likely cause of the disappearing bees, he can’t be absolutely sure. “Nobody has carried out the work to see if it is these mites,” he says.”

This statement is completely untrue. Here is how VanEngelsdorp, acting apiarist for the state of Pennsylvania was reported on the varroa hypothesis:

“VanEngelsdorp, a sandy-bearded 37-year-old, quickly eliminated the most obvious suspects: Varroa and tracheal mites, which have occasionally wrought damage on hives since the 1980s.

At the state lab in Harrisburg, Pa., VanEngelsdorp checked bee samples from Pennsylvania and Georgia. He washed bees with soapy water to dislodge Varroa mites and cut the thorax of the bees to look for tracheal mites; he found that the number of mites was not unusually high.”

Here is the German scientist Ulrich Warnke:

“The disturbing phenomenon is presently predominantly attributed to the Varroa mite in newspapers and periodicals. It remains uncontested that there are such connections. Yet plausible arguments have been put forward explaining that the mite attack also occurs as a result of previous damage to the bees’ immune system due to electromagnetic fields. ”

He goes on to point out that bees affected by Varroa would be found dead just outside the hive rather than disappearing as in the case of CCD.

Last years much-vaunted Penn State University investigation under Diane Cox-Foster also appears to have ruled out Varroa:

“In the course of the investigation all previous hypothesis had been ruled out. As one of the investigators put it: “the only candidate left standing was, in fact, IAPV.”(5)
“Other viruses and Nosema parasites had been suggested as the cause of CCD, but the researchers found that those pathogens appear in both CCD and non-CCD samples.”

https://inthesenewtimes.com/2008/05/15/the-disappearing-bees-ccd-and-electromagnetic-radiation/

Varroa is also inconsistent with CCD’s status as a mystery since as HESE have pointed out

“Infestations such as the varroa mite can be tested for quickly and easily, and could confirm this as the current cause, but this has not been reported this time.”

We can conclude that we don’t need £8 million to find out whether or not it is Varroa.

Rachel Oliver

CNN

With rising energy prices and the global biofuel rush already putting pressure on food prices, more news that some countries’ food supplies are being threatened from other corners is never welcome. But new research from the British Beekeeping Association (BBKA) released last week seemed to promise exactly that.

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