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A Mysterious Killer of Honeybees Threatens Our Food Supply
Second Opinion Newsletter ^ | NA | Dr. robert Rowen M.D

Posted on 05/08/2007 4:25:15 PM PDT by dvan

Albert Einstein once said, “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would have only four years of life left.” Why? Because without bees, plants don’t get pollinated. Without pollination, say goodbye to fruit, nuts, and some vegetables. We also won’t have natural oils (such as olive oil, sunflower oil, hemp oil, etc.). And we don’t have many natural fibers, such as cotton.

You can see how important the bee is to our livelihood and existence. Some economists say the bee is worth about $14 billion to our economy.

That’s why I was so alarmed to read the latest statistics from the American Beekeeper Federation. According to their latest report, there’s been an unexplained collapse of beehives in the country, with entire colonies being wiped out.

“During the last three months of 2006, we began to receive reports from commercial beekeepers of an alarming number of honey bee colonies dying in the eastern United States,” says Maryann Frazier, apiculture extension associate at Penn State University. While the problem didn’t start last year – it’s been going on for several years – it is getting progressively worse. And it’s not limited to the East Coast any more.

“Since the beginning of the year,” she continued, “beekeepers from all over the country have been reporting unprecedented losses. The losses are staggering: one beekeeper lost 11,000 of his 13,000 colonies; another 700 of 900; another 2,500 of 3,500; another virtually all of his 10,000.” The problem is so large, beekeepers are starting to wonder if their industry can survive.

Frazier calls the die off “Colony Collapse Disorder” or CCD. What could be causing CCD? Dennis van Engelsdorp is acting state apiarist with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. He says, “Preliminary work has identified several likely factors that could be causing or contributing to [the die off]. Among them are mites and associated diseases, some unknown pathogenic disease and pesticide contamination or poisoning.”

In other words, they don’t know what’s killing the bees. There’s an “unknown” killer of honeybees that threatens the nation’s entire food supply. Yes, pesticides, disease, and mites probably play a role. But there’s an underlying cause of CCD that nobody’s willing to talk about. It can lead directly to the death of the bees. Or it can weaken the bees enough that they are more susceptible to the pesticides, disease, and mites. Let me explain.

We’ve see evidence of a die off here in California. We have some very nice, mature peach and plum trees in our backyard. When I first moved to California in 2001, these trees produced wonderful fruit every year.

But something strange began in my third year here. The larger of the two peach trees did not fruit at all. And the plums soon petered out as well. The trees looked healthy, but I was mystified. They had produced awesome displays of blossoms in the spring. “Why didn’t they fruit out?” I wondered.

As I write this, it’s early spring, and the trees are in full bloom. But something’s missing. I’ve gone out for hours each day and the bees that should be prancing in the pollen – just aren’t there! Last year, our mature olive tree produced only one olive, in contrast to buckets of olives two years before. My neighbor also has fruit trees. He told me he’s seeing the same thing. “We should have bees all over our property right now,” he told me. “This year, none.”

Afraid we would lose an entire year of fruit production, I went into the Santa Rosa farmer’s market to ask for some help from a local beekeeper and honey distributor. He said his bees had not suffered nearly as much as everyone else’s.

“What’s the difference?” I asked. He said, “most beekeepers feed their bees a ‘sugar water’ syrup, but I don’t feed mine that.”

Here’s the rub: “Sugar water” nowadays means high fructose corn syrup. And nearly 100% of non-organic corn is genetically modified (GM)!

Most genetically modified corn contains Bt genes. Bt is a pesticide. Its gene is inserted into corn DNA so the corn can produce Bt to kill bugs that eat the corn.

But this couldn’t explain the widespread loss of bees. Not all beekeepers feed their bees. And bees don’t pollinate corn. So all of them aren’t dying from genetically modified corn or corn sweetener.

What about flowering plants they do visit, such as cotton? The Bangkok Post on November 17, 1997 reported some worrisome news. Some 30% of bees in the vicinity of a trial of Bt cotton in Thailand died.

Picking up on this, a leading German zoologist conducted a four-year study on bees picking up pollen from genetically modified rapeseed (aka canola oil). Professor Hans-Hinrich Kaatz then examined the microorganisms in the intestinal tubes of the young bees. He found that when the bee ingested the alien gene, the gene that was in the pollen was transferred to bacteria living inside its gut.

His quote is alarming: “The results indicate that we must assume that changes take place in the intestinal tubes of people and animals. The crossover of microorganisms takes place and people’s make-up in terms of micro-organisms in their intestinal tract is changed. This can therefore have health consequences” (emphasis added).

But it’s not just vague “health consequences.” It can have deadly consequences, as we’re seeing with the bees.

And the problem is only going to get worse. I was talking to a local beekeeper named Glenn, who came over to help my neighbor and us pollinate our trees. Glenn told me of the bitter fight the local beekeepers had with the agribusiness interests over genetically modified organisms (GMO). The Big Agri company Monsanto had bamboozled the farm owners into believing that they couldn’t compete without GMO. The beekeepers told the farmers that their farms might go under if the bees were wiped out. Monsanto still won.

The split was divisive between the sides. The bad blood caused the beekeepers to vacate their business offices that they had previously shared with the farm owners. In a subsequent election, I was shocked when conscientious Sonoma County voted to permit GM crops. We were deluged with mailings from Monsanto interests.

Glenn believes it’s a combination of new things that are weakening the gene pool of the bees. Bees never had experienced pesticides and GM-associated substances before. Feral (wild) bees tend to be very hardy creatures. But we’re now seeing them disappear as well.

Glenn referred me to fellow beekeeper and former Sonoma Beekeeper Association President Kathy Cox. She echoed the same message. Commercial beekeepers use chemicals in their hives. As a result, bees are facing a threat they have never seen before. Kathy told me, “My associate, Scott Nelson reported, ‘In the four county area (Napa, Mendocino, Marin, and Sonoma), Mendocino beekeepers have reported the fewest problems with their hives.’” Mendocino County voted for a GMO ban in 2004. The county actually defeated Monsanto, which spent megabucks to try to defeat the proposition.

Kathy says that bees require a protein-rich diet, as found in pollen. GMO can derange their immune systems with a cascade of proteins they’ve never before encountered. The changes can wreak havoc on their bodies — and the hives.

All I’ve discussed in this issue is the pesticide Bt. But there are other GMO agents in pollen that are foreign to the bees. Any one of them could weaken their immune systems. They could become vulnerable to almost anything, including the mites researchers know are ravaging some hives.

Are we facing a collapse of our food production thanks to the destruction of our friendly pollinators? I can’t tell you for sure that GM crops are killing all of the honey bees. It’s possible there are other factors. But I can tell you the GM crops are a major contributor to the problem. And we just don’t know how widespread it will become. Seeing the problem firsthand and knowing it’s happening around the country has me downright scared.

If it’s half as bad as it sounds, it’s not just our backyard that will be barren. Your supermarket and refrigerator will be barren as well. I predict that GMO will make the Vioxx scandal seem puny. (Merck deliberately allowed tens of thousands to die by Vioxx knowing its harm to the circulation system.)

I believe that GM crops are the greatest threat to our planet that we have ever seen. I fear a calamity of Biblical proportions may be in its early stages. I hope that I am wrong. But I hope you see how important this is.

Years ago, scientists from all over the world urged all governments to suspend all environmental releases of GM crops and to ban patents on organisms, seeds, and cell lines. If you still have doubts of the crisis, please visit the website www.i-sis.org.uk/list.php. Also see www.seedsofdeception.com. You won’t have any more doubts.

I urge you to contact your elected officials and demand an immediate moratorium on planting GM crops until it can be proven that friendly insect populations aren’t disrupted by GMO. Demand that all GM crops be so labeled on store shelves. Please buy organic only. Tell Monsanto how you feel by withholding your dollars from all their products. DO NOT consume any non-organic corn products (chips, tortillas, etc.) or processed items made with corn sweetener (high fructose corn syrup). You could ingest the transforming Bt gene. I eat out less and less. And when I do, I attempt to frequent only organic restaurants.

I also think legislation must be passed holding corporations and their stockholders financially and legally responsible for all damages that result from escape of their “patented” genes. After all, if they can receive the benefit of riches from a patent for their deeds, they should also have the duty to pay the piper when problems come up.

If I were to inadvertently poison you, I would be held criminally responsible. And so should they! If my dog were to escape and bite you, I would be responsible. When their pollen “escapes” and/or “bites” my field or kills my bees, should not their patented gene profits pay for it? If Monsanto stockholders knew that they could be personally responsible for your death when you become a Bt factory, we will suddenly see a newfound consciousness.

I do assure you problems are coming, whether it’s the end of honeybees or a parallel GMO calamity. (I wish Albert Einstein were alive today. I have no doubt he would travel to Washington to warn of the impending calamity, as he did regarding Nazi atomic research.)

Please join me in this fight for our food. Call your Congressman, Senator, and state representatives today! The easiest way to contact your representatives is to visit the websites www.house.gov/writerep/ (for the House) and www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/ senators_cfm.cfm (for the Senate). Both allow you to search (by zip code in the case of the House) for your representatives. They give phone numbers and addresses for both DC and local offices. They have web forms you can fill out and send for easy contact. And you can even schedule an appointment with some. If you don’t have a computer, please borrow a friend’s or visit your local library. The librarian can help you find these web pages. It’s vital you do this today!

Ref: American Beekeeping Federation online, February 2007.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: agricuture; bees; beesaredoomed; bt; case; doomage; eeeeeeeeevilmonsanto; food; genetics; gmo; irrational; luddites; solarcycles; sunspots; wearedoomed
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To: hophead

I’m sorry but I do not appreciate that question. My husband died last July. I miss him with all my heart.


61 posted on 05/08/2007 5:27:49 PM PDT by MamaB
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To: dvan

Appreciate your sincerity, but bees are all over my crabapple tree in bloom. Bumblebees and wasps are everywhere. Of course this is just my little acre of land.

(Obviously) I’m no pro beekeeper, but these repeated bee die-off warnings sound more and more political every time reported. “Big Agri Monsanto” and threats of GM biologicals - is “global warming” suddenly not converting enough voters to the hippie culture/left? Or maybe imported bee-related product supplies have something to do with all of this?

In all fairness, if the threat is so serious, and you are so concerned, can you suggest some possible concrete actions that can be taken and by whom? I’m sincerely curious as to what you think because you are so adamant and I like your profile.


62 posted on 05/08/2007 5:28:03 PM PDT by LurkedLongEnough
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To: Post-Neolithic

“Everything has been flowering like crazy but zero honey bees.”

If the story is true, how the hell have your plants kept blooming?


63 posted on 05/08/2007 5:29:23 PM PDT by hophead ("Enjoy Every Sandwich")
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To: lormand

“Yes, the bees have a virus”

No no no. They are all in Cancun.


64 posted on 05/08/2007 5:31:07 PM PDT by hophead ("Enjoy Every Sandwich")
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To: dvan

Little known fact alert:
honeybees and earthworms didn’t exist in the Americas until brought here by the English in the 1600’s


65 posted on 05/08/2007 5:31:11 PM PDT by databoss
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To: dvan

Well, they can come get bees from my yard, I have loads of them. I had tons of fruit, what killed it this year was the late freeze. My grape vines have recovered well, but no plums or pears this year.

If their bees are “weak”, maybe they need to shore them up with wild bees.


66 posted on 05/08/2007 5:33:22 PM PDT by visualops (artlife.us)
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To: Dutch Boy

“As of tonight, about a dozen dead wasps that were attempting to build a nest on my deck”

“dead wasps that were attempting to build a nest”

Now I am worried!!!!


67 posted on 05/08/2007 5:34:03 PM PDT by hophead ("Enjoy Every Sandwich")
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To: MamaB

“This is what I first thought of when I heard about the bees dying”

From whay I’ve heard, the bees go out foraging and don’t return. There aren’t a bunch of dead bees in or around the colonies. Whatever it is doesn’t seem to be directly fatal to the bees. It disrupts their behavior such that they just seem to disappear.

My pet theory is the proliferation of cell towers transmitting in the multi-gigahertz range. A bees body is about 1/4 wavelength long at 2 gigaherz. Maybe their navagation system or memory is affected by the induced currents in their bodies.

On the way home from work today I passed a sign on the road where somebody was selling their hives. I want to get back into beekeeping but I’ll wait until this problem is figured out and fixed.


68 posted on 05/08/2007 5:34:17 PM PDT by UnChained (Illegal immigrants aren't the problem. Liberalism is.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

Albert Einstein: “Damn it Jim, I’m a physicist, not a beekeeper!”


69 posted on 05/08/2007 5:35:53 PM PDT by 6SJ7
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To: MamaB

Lol it’ll only catch a misspelled word, not the wrong one.
At first I thought you were using some plant terminology lol


70 posted on 05/08/2007 5:36:30 PM PDT by visualops (artlife.us)
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To: anonsquared

“My peach, pears, apple, and olive trees have the largest crop ever. My two acres is covered with purple vetch, crimson clover, rosemary, poppies and lavender. The entire two acres HUMS, there are so many bees.”

As communications tech and an ex-apiarist, I’m curious. How good is the cell phone coverage at your place? Any cell towers within 2 miles?


71 posted on 05/08/2007 5:42:34 PM PDT by UnChained (Illegal immigrants aren't the problem. Liberalism is.)
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To: Post-Neolithic
anyone confirm or deny this? Confirm. Around my home in Northern Virginia, up until a couple years ago, the bushes would be loaded with bees of all kinds and curious yellowjackets would spend hours buzzing around the outside of my house. What they were interested in I'll never know. But they were after something. Wasps would persistently try to build nests in the fenders of my 4WD toyota truck. These days, I see 1 yellow jacket where there might have been five, 1 bumble bee where there might have been 20, no honey bees. No wasps.

If it were up to me, I'd get one of the remaining good hives, and take it to the biosphere.

From within there, the bees can be studied and the dead or missing ones located. It might provide insight as to what is happening to them on the outside.

A buddy of mine, purely speculating on the matter, connected the bee situation with the whales and dolphins beaching themselves. Drudge has an article that an arctic seal has swum to Florida. It died after it got here. He (my buddy, not drudge) mentioned that a lot of these creatures get their sense of direction from the magnetic poles. There has been talk about a pole reversal being due. Pole reversals have happened many times in the past; lava samples from the atlantic rift shows iron magnetically oriented one way, then the other, frozen according to the time and position of the magnetic pole when it hit the cool water, kind of like you expect it to look on mylar recording tape if you put filings on it. Could be the creatures' compasses need to be recalibrated. I wonder how long it takes nature to accomplish that.

72 posted on 05/08/2007 5:43:19 PM PDT by Jason_b
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To: hophead

Plants have flowers that bloom to pollinate and produce seed to reproduce. The flowering is not dependent on the pollination. If pollination stops then that would eventually cause a problem.
However flowers are pollinated by more than just bees. Birds, other insects, and weather also contribute to pollination.


73 posted on 05/08/2007 5:44:41 PM PDT by visualops (artlife.us)
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To: MamaB

‘he bought me a jar of honey which was made by someone in the neighborhood.’

I hate to tell you, but the BEES made the honey, your neighbor probably didn’t make the JAR either.... LOL.


74 posted on 05/08/2007 5:45:29 PM PDT by AmericanDave (Over it's not, till over it IS, Jedi....... Yoda Berra)
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To: Scotswife
First of all, the "doctor" that wrote this story has issues.

Second, honey bees are not even native to North America. How did all the plants survive before the bees were introduced by Europeans?

75 posted on 05/08/2007 5:45:32 PM PDT by TomB ("The terrorist wraps himself in the world's grievances to cloak his true motives." - S. Rushdie)
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To: hophead
"If the story is true, how the hell have your plants kept blooming?"

You don't need Honey Bees to make plants bloom. You do need them to produce fruit and seeds(except for grass that is. Which is why Watermellons, Cantelope, Cucumbers and fruit trees, plants need pollination.

76 posted on 05/08/2007 5:49:51 PM PDT by Post-Neolithic (Money only makes Communists rich Communists)
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To: TomB

Like your tag line....

What about the ‘killer’ bees? Are they dying off, or are they tougher....?


77 posted on 05/08/2007 5:50:38 PM PDT by AmericanDave (Over it's not, till over it IS, Jedi....... Yoda Berra)
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To: dvan
Then there is this theory,

and this one.

I have seen so many different theories on the disappearance of the bees. Which one is it? Or is it a combination of all of them happening at once?

78 posted on 05/08/2007 5:50:52 PM PDT by redgirlinabluestate
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To: tgambill
"...HAARP, there lies a clue about the bees...."

First thing that comes to my mind is food as a weapon, control the food supply and you control the population. Surrender your government of-the-people, democracy, Republic, become members of the NWO dictatorship and we will stop killing your bees. You will be able to eat again. Do you want to stay alive as serfs or remain free when it means certain starvation? Anyone who can kill bees worldwide, can extort as such, worldwide. There was another article this bee situation is going on in Taiwan.

My answer: live free or die.

79 posted on 05/08/2007 5:51:11 PM PDT by Jason_b
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To: Sunnyflorida

A Mysterious Killer of Honeybees Threatens Our Food Supply


80 posted on 05/08/2007 5:53:42 PM PDT by COBOL2Java (The most dangerous place in the world is between Hillary and the Oval Office)
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