Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

where are the bees

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

luckily *knock on wood*, have had lotsa bees in my yard this year...

they love the borage...

 

 

Published on Thursday, April 26, 2007 by The Philadelphia Inquirer

No Bees? Not Just Strange, But Scary

by Dave Lindorff

Where are the bees?

 

As an unwilling and disgruntled suburbanite, I take great pride in my

dandelion crop. Over the decade that I have owned my 2.3-acre lot in

Maple Glen, just north of Philadelphia, I have watched as the

dandelion population in my lawn has grown year on year.

 

One reason I've enjoyed the display is that I know these bright-yellow-

flowered plants, which bloom early and continue blooming well into

fall, are popular with honeybees. Given all the problems the bees have

been having with insecticides, destruction of natural habitat, and the

like, I'm happy to give them some help.

 

I remember that when I was a kid growing up in rural Connecticut,

getting stung by a honeybee was almost a weekly occurrence that went

along with going barefoot in the lawn. (My parents liked dandelions,

too.)

 

Today, though, you could walk all day barefoot around my yard and

never get stung. There's not a honeybee to be seen.

 

I walked two miles recently around the neighborhood, past plenty of

dandelions, including through a feral field full of them, and didn't

see a single bee. Not one. This is particularly strange because in the

first warm days of spring, the hives are usually out in full force

trying to replenish supplies after a long winter and in anticipation

of a big period of egg-laying and hatching of larvae.

 

And it's not just dandelions.

 

Behind my house is a wild cherry tree. A few days ago, it was in full

bloom. Ordinarily, this would be an occasion for a true bee fiesta.

The tree at this time in prior years was virtually a cloud of buzzing

insects, all zipping from flower to flower.

 

This year, there was not a bee to be seen on the entire tree.

 

This is beyond strange. It's downright scary.

 

When you consider that perhaps half the plants in nature depend upon

pollinators like bees to reproduce, you have to wonder what a future

without bees holds - not just for the animals that live on those

plants, but for human beings.

 

And it's not just honeybees that are missing. Honeybees, after all,

are immigrants from Europe, and the Americas survived quite nicely

without them before their arrival with the colonists. But the native

bees - ground bees and bumblebees, for example - are gone, too. The

only bees I've seen since the spring began are wood bees - large,

clumsy-looking, bumblebee-like creatures that bore neat circular holes

into the wood of the house and lay their eggs in solitary nests. Thank

heavens for them, or there wouldn't be a bee on my property.

 

But even several hundred wood bees can hardly compensate for the total

absence of other pollinators.

 

What's happening here?

 

There are a lot of possible culprits: climate change, ubiquitous

microwave radiation, overuse of herbicides and pesticides, stress, and

lowered immunity to fungal, viral, bacterial and mite infections, or

perhaps a combination of all of the above.

 

My feeling, though, is one of dark foreboding.

 

When something as basic as bees vanishes from the scene as quickly as

this, you know we're in Big Trouble.

 

Dave Lindorff's most recent book is " The Case for Impeachment " (St.

Martin's Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.

 

©2007 The Philadelphia Inquirer

 

 

Don't know, don't care, don't talk, don't stare, don't know, don't care

We live in fear the end is near and we are easy to control

It's an orange alert

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...