In These New Times

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Posts Tagged ‘disappearing bees’

Cellphone buzz threaten honeybee survival: Study

Posted by seumasach on May 29, 2010

And so the much derided University of Koblenz-Landau experiment has been pretty much replicated by Indian scientists with the same incriminating results regarding EM radiation as a disrupter of honey bee activity. Will western press hacks swarm menacingly or quietly ignore it? We now have a body of work coming out of India around this crucial issue and hopefully they will start to take preventive action. Meanwhile the dying western civilization dooms itself with its ignorant and self-destructive deployment of military-industrial technology.

New Delhi, May 28 (PTI) Electromagnetic rays emitted by cellphones may sound the death knell for the honeybee which has been found to have altered its behaviour leading to the complete collapse of bee colonies, says a new study.

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Mobile phones not responsible for disappearance of bees: senior engineer

Posted by seumasach on May 15, 2010

So Chinese scientists are cretins too!

Here we find some very dubious premises: if something hasn’t been proved you don’t investigate it: what matters is who you think should be blamed: if the radiation level isn’t high enough to heat the bee, it can’t be high enough to disturb its navigation system: it can’t be mobile phones because it might be something else.

In sum, whatever it is, it isn’t mobile phones.

If our future is in the hands of scientists like this, it is bleak indeed!

Click here for the evidence that EM radiation is responsible for the disappearance of the bees.

Smart Grid

15th May, 2010

NINGBO, Zhejiang, May 15, 2010 (Xinhua via COMTEX) — A senior Chinese engineer said Saturday that no scientific evidence has proved that radiation from mobile phones had caused abrupt disappearance of bees since last Autumn.

“I don’t think handsets radiation should be blamed for the decrease of bees,” said Wu Hequan, vice president of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, at a forum on information and communication technologies in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, on the sidelines of the Shanghai Expo.

Some scientists are putting forward the theory that radiation from mobile phones interferes with bees’ navigation systems, preventing the famously homeloving species from finding their way back to their hives, according to a British newspaper The Independent.

Wu, also an expert in broadband information network, said radiation from mobile phones posed no verifiable threat to bees’ survival as the amount of radiation from a mobile phone base station was not even stronger than that from a microwave oven.

He pointed to rapid urbanization, decreasing plants and worsening ecological environment as a possible answer to the disappearance which started in the United States last Autumn and then spread to Europe.

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Bee numbers plummet as billions of colonies die across the world

Posted by seumasach on May 4, 2010

“The British government’s National Bee Unit denies the existence of CDD over  here, blaming the bloodsucking varroa mite and rainy summers that have stopped  bees foraging for food.”

Despite the observable fact that there are no bees, and reports of their disappearance by beekeepers, the British government stands firm: there is no CCD in Britain.

“Pesticides are believed to be a key cause of a crisis known as Colony Collapse Disorder”

Note the use of the passive voice: but who, precisely, believes that? The official investigation has ruled out all specific causes. CCD is rife in areas where the suspected pesticides are not used, notably Spain.

The authorities persist in ignoring the very powerful case that CCD is caused by EM radiation.

They also fail to link CCD to the disappearance of other species such as bats, small birds, butterflies, beetles etc.

Daily Mail

3rd May, 2010

The world faces a future with little meat and no cotton because of a catastrophic collapse in bee colonies, experts have warned.

Many vital crops are dependent on pollination by honeybees, but latest figures show a third failed to survive the winter in the U.S.

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Fears for crops as shock figures from America show scale of bee catastrophe

Posted by seumasach on May 3, 2010

The world may be on the brink of biological disaster after news that a third of US bee colonies did not survive the winter

Alison Benjamin

Guardian

2nd May, 2010

Click here for role of EM radiation in causing CCD

Disturbing evidence that honeybees are in terminal decline has emerged from the United States where, for the fourth year in a row, more than a third of colonies have failed to survive the winter.

The decline of the country’s estimated 2.4 million beehives began in 2006, when a phenomenon dubbed colony collapse disorder (CCD) led to the disappearance of hundreds of thousands of colonies. Since then more than three million colonies in the US and billions of honeybees worldwide have died and scientists are no nearer to knowing what is causing the catastrophic fall in numbers.

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Apiarists launch bid to save Moray bees

Posted by seumasach on April 20, 2010

“Local beekeepers claim 90% of Moray’s wild honeybee colonies have been wiped out since 2007.”

With all due respect, “poor weather, bad management, a bee mite called varroa and pesticides” are unlikely to produce such a dramatic effect in so short a time. There has to be a new element and none of these is. The density and extent of electrosmog has increased exponentially in recent years and its impact on bees has long been known. The Moray beekeepers are aware of this factor but are discreetly, and perhaps wisely, failing to mention it such is the unpopularity of this thesis amongst certain powerful vested interests.

For more click here

Press and Journal

19th April, 2010

BEEKEEPERS in Moray launched a conservation project yesterday, with the first in a series of sessions outlining how people can help save the endangered honeybee.

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Shocking U.S. Senate Hearing Confirms Dangers of Cell Phones

Posted by seumasach on April 11, 2010

mercola.com

21st January, 2010

Witnesses before a Senate Committee testified about research into cell phone use and its potential impact on human health, as well as the potential side effects such as brain and salivary gland tumors.

In 2008, cell phones were identified as a contributor to salivary gland tumors. Dr. Siegal Sadetzki, who testified in September 2009 at the U.S. Senate Hearing, is the principle investigator of the study that made this finding.

The report states that your risk of getting a parotid tumor on the same side of your head that you use for listening to the mobile phone increases by:

  • 34 percent if you are a regular cell phone user and have used a mobile phone for 5 years.
  • 58 percent if you had more than about 5,500 calls in your lifetime.
  • 49 percent if you have spoken on the phone for more than 266.3 hours during your lifetime.

The second video above by Electromagnetichealth.org, filmed at Columbia University Law School at a presentation on Wireless Hazards, explains how wireless radiation creates cognitive problems, damages DNA, diminishes fertility, causes disorientation and navigation difficulties for birds, bees and other wildlife, and may contribute to Bee Colony Collapse, which, if not reversed, will jeopardize the future of life on earth.

Go here for Dr Mercola’s full comments

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Mobile phone towers threaten honey bees: study

Posted by seumasach on March 31, 2010

canada.com

31st August, 2009

The electromagnetic waves emitted by mobile phone towers and cellphones can pose a threat to honey bees, a study published in India has concluded.

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The buzz on bees and crops

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2010

This is the next stage in the spin concerning CCD, the disappearing bees. Now we accept their disappearance and play down its significance:

“If pollinators were to vanish, it would reduce total food production by only about 6 percent”

This is highly questionable if not downright mendacious and the authors use a simple mechanical model failing to take into account the interdependence of all environmental factors. Contrast these authors claims with the viewpoint of Andrew Goldsworthy:

While the bulk of our staple foods come from wind-pollinated cereals that do not rely directly on the bees, these do not support the nitrogen-fixing bacteria needed for sustainable agriculture.  Without bee pollinated crops (e.g. legumes) that host these bacteria, we will have to rely on artificial nitrogen fertilisers, which are either mined from limited natural sources or manufactured from the nitrogen of the air. Both are heavily dependent on fossil fuels and are not sustainable. Without them even our wind-pollinated crops will be decimated, which will lead to famine and mass starvation.

In addition, cereals do not provide an adequate balanced diet. In particular, they are almost totally lacking in vitamin C, which is essential to prevent scurvy.

It is simply sinister to hear so many fruit and vegetables, dependent on pollination described as “luxury foods”. According to a motion put through the European parliament

Three quarters of food production (76%) is dependent on bees and 84% of vegetables grown in Europe depend on pollination.


We also, of course, find the implicit Malthusian angle.

The paradox is that our demand for these foods endangers the wild bees that help make their cultivation possible

This is a variation of the Malthusian thesis that food supplies can never keep up with growing population

This is the  mantra of the Anglo-American elite and relates to what has always been their greatest obsession: the culling of humanity.

New Observer

27th March, 2010

In the past five years, as the phenomenon known as colony-collapse disorder has spread across the United States and Europe, causing the disappearance of whole colonies of domesticated honeybees, many people have come to fear that our food supply is in peril. The news this week that a Department of Agriculture survey found that American honeybees had died in great numbers this winter can only add to such fears.

The truth, fortunately, is not nearly so dire. But it is more complicated.

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Scientists stumped as bee population declines further

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2010

“Under normal condition you have 10 percent winter losses.. this year there are 30, 40 to 50 percent losses.”

This is looking catastrophic and yet these tossers calling themselves scientists continue to talk crap. Here, unsurprisingly we have a malthusian angle:

“The world population growth is in a sense the reason for pollinators’ decline,”

Never mind! This will soon correct itself if the scientists continue to be “stumped” and mysteriously fail to follow the most promising lead of all.

Data from the US Department of Agriculture show a 29 percent drop in beehives in 2009, following a 36 percent decline in 2008 and a 32 percent fall in 2007.

This affects not only honey production but around 15 billion dollars worth of crops that depend on bees for pollination.

Scientists call the phenomenon “” that has led to the disappearance of millions of adult bees and beehives and occurred elsewhere in the world including in Europe.

Researchers have looked at viruses, parasites, insecticides, malnutrition and other  but have been unable to pinpoint a specific cause for the .

The rough winter in many parts of the United States will likely accentuate the problem, says Jeff Pettis, lead researcher at Department of Agriculture’s Bee Research Laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland.

Winter figures will be published in April. But preliminary estimates already indicate losses of 30 to 50 percent, said David Mendes, president of the American Beekeeping Federation.

“There are a lot of beekeepers who are in trouble” he said.

“Under normal condition you have 10 percent winter losses.. this year there are 30, 40 to 50 percent losses.”

He said the phenomenon probably results from a combination of factors but that the increased use of pesticides appears to be a major cause.

“I don’t put my bees in Florida because the last couple of years there has been tremendous increase in pesticide use in the orange crop to fight a disease,” he said.

“It’s a  and the only way to control this disease is to use pesticide… a few years ago they did not use any pesticide at all.”

He said that pesticide use “has changed dramatically” and has made beekeeping “more challenging.”

Research conducted in 23 US states and Canada and published in the Public Library of Science journal found 121 different pesticides in 887 samples of bees, wax, pollen and other elements of hives, lending credence to the notion of pesticides as a key problem.

Pettis said the finding of pesticide residue is “troubling.”

“It might not be the only factor but it’s a contributing factor,” he said.

The best thing to help bees, he said its “to try to limit habitat destruction,” leaving more natural areas in agriculture and in cities such so honey can have “a diverse natural environment.”

Ironically, he said the problem stems from expansion of agriculture to feed the world. But in destroying bee populations, that can hurt crop production.

“The world population growth is in a sense the reason for pollinators’ decline,” he said.

“Because we need to produce more and more food to feed the world and we grow crops in larger fields. A growing world means growing more food and to do that we need pollinators. And the fact that the world is continuing to grow is the driving force behind the habitat destruction.”

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Dispatch from Devon

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2010

For more on “mobile phone masts interfering with navigation systems”, click here

Matthew Engel

FT

27th March, 2010

Having decided that spring had finally sprung, Paddy Wallace zipped himself into his protective suit, grabbed his veil and headed off in his tractor round the country lanes of North Devon.

Wallace is the second-generation owner of Quince Honey Farm in South Molton, one of the biggest bee farms in Britain, and his mission was to assess the winter’s depredations. He has 1,500 hives spread around his neighbours’ fields in one of the most glorious symbiotic relationships in agriculture: he borrows a sliver of their land, and his bees pollinate their crops.

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Bees face ‘unprecedented’ pesticide exposures at home and afield

Posted by seumasach on March 24, 2010

The pollinator crisis is beyond doubt the greatest ecological crisis of our times threatening, as it does, mass starvation, an outcome, unfortunately, not uncongenial to the our neo-Malthusian elite. Is that why “the greens” or the left (remember them?) have nothing at all to say about it? Is that why the mainstream media is absolutely silent- their very own silent spring? Is that why the work of scientists like Ulrich Warnke is ignored and the investigation is kept in house, entrusted to the same old names, most of them from Penn State University, who are assiduously leading us nowhere?

Having previously ruled out pesticides, not without good reason, they have now ruled it in. Perhaps they understand, after all, the need for some kind of cause, that a combination of none causes isn’t good enough. As long as they don’t mention EM radiation, of course.

So here we are again with the pesticide theory. The hives are steeped in them apparently.In CCD the bees are not found dead in or around the hive. Our researchers explain this by claiming that

” sickened foragers probably die before they get home.”

If they are disorientated by the pesticide to the extent that they can’t get home how does the pesticide get into the hive? If they do get home to leave the pesticide traces why aren’t dead bees found there?

Oh well. Back to the drawing board and a new appeal for more research funding.

This years losses are again terrible but the “experts” continue to serve up nonsense and time is running out for us.

See also:

ITNT Archive: Disappearing Bees

Janet Raloff

Science News

21st March, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO For years the news has been the same: Honey bees are being hammered by some mysterious environmental plague that has a name — colony collapse disorder – but no established cause. A two-year study now provides evidence indicting one likely group of suspects: pesticides. It found “unprecedented levels” of mite-killing chemicals and crop pesticides in hives across the United States and parts of Canada.

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