Guest guest Posted May 2, 2010 Report Share Posted May 2, 2010 http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view & pageId=143737 http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/6984630.html Bee die-off accelerates, putting an industry in peril By WILLIAM PACK San Antonio Express-News April 30, 2010, 10:42PM 1 2 TOM REEL: Express-News Youngblood tends to hives this week near Pearsall in South Texas. His bee population has stabilized recently amid the general decline. SAN ANTONIO — Dropping in droves, bees are still puzzling agriculturists. It is the fourth straight winter that more than a quarter of the existing honeybee population has disappeared. This year, however, the rate of loss hit its second-highest point since 2007-2008. Beekeeper Raymond David Park was not surprised Thursday when the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported an accelerated rate of bee losses for a fourth straight winter. “There are a lot of people that are about ready to give up,†said Park, who watched his colonies in the Devine area near San Antonio shrink by more than half in the last three years. “You make new hives and they die again. †The newest estimates on the extent of the losses of the nation's honeybee populations jumped back past the 30 percent level this winter to nearly 34 percent. If the decline can't be corrected, some officials worry about the continued economic viability of the nation's commercial beekeeping industry. “Thirty percent losses four years in a row really is hard for anyone to take †said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, past president of the Apiary Inspectors of America and an entomology researcher at Penn State University. “I'm surprised not more have gone out of business already.†Bees are called on to pollinate about 100 crops, adding about $15  billion to the value of agricultural commodities, Kim Kaplan, a spokeswoman for the USDA's Agricultural Research Service said. Kaplan said her agency is spending about $10 million this year on researching a key component of the declining bee population problem called Colony Collapse Disorder. Exported from Texas California imports hives from Texas and other states to pollinate about 680 000 acres of almonds. Officials said each acre of almonds needs about two hives, and farmers have been paying top dollars to beekeepers for pollination services. Commercial beekeepers also produced more than $232 million worth of honey last year, the USDA reported. It said honey prices reached a record high last year of $1.45 cents a pound. What it's not Kaplan said research has helped exclude certain conditions as causes of the ailment but so far has identified no smoking gun. Scientists believe the syndrome arises from a combination of factors — bee diseases and parasites, environmental factors like drought and crop pesticides, and management stresses that include the number of times hives are moved around and how they are fed. Texas has about 500,000 colonies that move in and out of the state every year, some of which have been hit hard by the ongoing disappearing bee syndrome, said Paul Jackson, the Texas Apiary Inspection Service's chief inspector. Some beekeepers can lose 75 percent of their hives and other beekeepers close by may get by unscathed, said Jackson. He agrees a variety of factors are contributing to the problem and he worries it may take years for a solution to arise. Honey prices strong Youngblood, a Pearsall beekeeper who is president of the Texas Beekeepers Association, said he has seen his bee count stabilize since rains started falling again last fall, but he knows other operations have been hit hard. With honey prices strong, he is optimistic about the industry. A new survey showed almost 34 percent of the nation's honeybees were lost from October 2009 to April, the fourth straight winter of unexplained higher-than-normal bee losses. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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