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Advancing Scientific Integrity on Bees
Townhall.com ^ | June 17, 2017 | Paul Driessen

Posted on 06/17/2017 4:41:31 AM PDT by Kaslin

Second Lady Karen Pence and Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue recently teamed up to install a honeybee hive on the grounds of the Vice President’s residence at the Naval Observatory in Washington, DC. This will serve as a “great example” of what people can do to help “reverse the decline” in managed honeybee colonies around the country, the secretary said.

Helping bees and educating people about bee problems is a good idea. However, if the hive is an attempt to reduce media and environmentalist criticism of Trump Administration policies – or put the Pences and Ag Department on the “right” side of the “bee-pocalypse” issue – it will backfire. It will also undermine administration efforts to advance evidence-based science, restore integrity to scientific and regulatory processes, promote safe modern technologies, and support continued crop production and exports.

A steady stream of misinformation has fueled misplaced public anxiety about bees. Being on the “right” side must therefore begin with recognizing that honeybee populations are actually increasing, as the decline in managed honeybee colonies reversed in recent years. Attention to the vice presidential hive should instead focus on preventing and controlling the biggest single threat to honeybees, especially in small-scale hobbyist hives: infestations of Varroa mites.

Anti-pesticide zealots and headline-seeking news media have been talking for years about domesticated bees (and now wild bees) serving as “the canary in the coal mine,” whose health problems portend yet another man-made environmental calamity. The future of agriculture, human nutrition, perhaps all life on Earth could be at risk if bees and other important pollinators “disappear,” they ominously intone.

That is nothing more than fear-mongering. Honeybee populations have been bouncing back nicely since the days when many worried about mysterious large-scale deaths in hives. In fact, the “crisis” was seriously (and sometimes deliberately) overblown, and honeybee populations are now at or near 20-year highs in North America and every other continent, except Antarctica.

Assiduous scientific investigation helped identify the mites, viruses and fungal pathogens that can infest hives, and beekeepers are learning to treat infestations without inadvertently killing bees or entire hives. That process has underscored the hard reality that, for professional and hobbyist beekeepers alike, maintaining healthy hives is complicated and difficult, especially when multiple pathogens invade.

However, in another sense, honeybees truly are canaries in the coal mine. They are harbingers of the ways environmentalist attacks on modern agriculture can damage one of the most productive, competitive and globally vital sectors of the American economy. American agriculture feeds the USA and world, while generating trade surpluses and supporting rural and small town communities across the country.

Unfortunately, determined anti-pesticide zealots have been trying for nearly a decade to use the alleged “bee crisis” to prevent farmers from using advanced-technology neonicotinoid pesticides that boost agricultural yields, reduce the need for other crop-protection insecticides that can harm bees, and reduce risks to humans, birds, other animals, non-pest insects, and bees.

Neonics are now the world’s most widely used pesticide class. They are mainly (some 90%) applied as seed coatings, which lets crops absorb the chemicals into their tissue and allows minuscule amounts to target only pests that feed on and destroy crops. Radical greens have tried for years to blame neonics for higher-than-normal over-winter hive losses, “colony collapse disorder” (in which bees mysteriously abandon their colonies, leaving the queen, food and unhatched eggs behind) and other bee problems.

The mere fact that neonics may be detected in negligible, below-harmful levels in the nectar and pollen of neonic-treated crops, in foliage near neonic-treated cropland, or in the food stored in honeybees hives, has fueled emotional campaigns to ban these crop protection products. The activists simply ignore large-scale field studies that have consistently shown no adverse effects on honeybees at the colony level from field-realistic exposures to neonics. They ignore the fact that bees thrive among and around neonic-treated corn and canola crops in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia and elsewhere.

Anti-pesticide crusaders are determined to take neonics out of farmers’ pest-control “tool-kits.” They will not let scientific facts stand in their way.

This is the tug-of-war that Mrs. Pence’s beehive has plunged her into. What if her bee colony collapses and dies? Whatever embarrassment this may bring to her skills as a beekeeper (and those of USDA staff who will be charged with keeping the hive alive), activists will claim the bee deaths further confirm that the Trump Administration’s enviro-critics are right – and America’s farmers are wrong.

So what can we learn from the fate of one bee colony on the bucolic grounds of the Naval Observatory in the middle of urban Washington, DC? Potentially plenty – if Mrs. Pence and her USDA aides put on their thinking caps, learn more about “bee issue” realities, use this otherwise empty gesture to dramatize the real issues facing honeybees and their keepers, and help advance the cause of scientific integrity.

In recent weeks, the USDA-supported Bee Informed Partnership at the University of Maryland published its annual survey of honeybee colony losses for 2016-17. Although lower than last year and among the best since the decade-old survey began, over-winter losses of 21% and in-season (summer) losses of 18% are still troublesome numbers. However, a vitally important point must be kept in mind.

Those losses were suffered overwhelmingly by small, backyard, hobbyist beekeepers. (Barely 1% of respondents to the BIP survey are large-scale commercial beekeepers, which skews the survey.) This parallels other studies that show small-scale, hobbyist, backyard beekeepers suffer much higher rates of colony loss than do large-scale professionals, who handle the vast majority of US bees and hives.

Those other studies also show that small-scale beekeepers have the greatest difficulty keeping their bees alive in the face of the scourge of Varroa destructor mites. An epidemic since its 1987 arrival in the USA, this bee parasite is a triple threat. Bee larvae often hatch with Varroa mites already attached to them, and these parasites: (1) suck the bee’s hemolymph blood-equivalent out of them, (2) thereby compromising the bees’ immune systems, and (3) vectoring a dozen or more viruses and diseases into honey bees and colonies, turning what were just nuisance infections before Varroa arrived into devastating epidemics.

This has produced a striking paradox – which Mrs. Pence’s new bee colony could help explain. In the wake of widespread publicity about the supposed bee crisis, tens of thousands of well-meaning people across the USA – from the rural countryside to rooftops in densely populated urban areas – have set out to “help the bees” by setting up hobbyist beekeeping operations of one or a few hives. The problem, studies show, is that these well-intentioned initiatives often end up making things worse for honeybees.

Many newly-minted, nature-loving hobbyist beekeepers believe – contrary to the overwhelming bulk of beekeeping literature and practice – that treating their hives chemically for Varroa mites is “against nature,” and thereby hasten the inevitable disaster to their hives. When those hobbyist hives collapse under the weight of uncontrolled or poorly controlled Varroa mites and related diseases, surviving bees migrate in search of new homes, frequently among the healthy hives of some neighboring professional beekeeper – carrying Varroa mites with them. That’s how hobbyist beekeepers inadvertently contribute to the spread of this honeybee epidemic – and to the spread of misinformation about bee losses.

Mrs. Pence’s colony won’t provide lessons on supposed harmful effects on honeybees from exposure to neonic pesticides. The nearest neonic-treated canola and cornfields are well beyond her bees’ roughly 3-mile flight. However, it’s a golden opportunity to use the colony as an object lesson in what small-scale beekeepers should do to keep their hives alive and thriving: above all, control Varroa mites.

Mrs. Pence’s bee colony could become an exemplar for small-scale beekeepers on how to do right by honeybees. By implementing sound beekeeping practices (particularly properly timed Varroa counts and controls), live-streaming those practices and daily hive activity via the bee equivalent of the Panda Cam, and posting short how-to videos, she could teach millions about bees … and advance hobbyist efforts to help bees. That would help replace failure and disappointment with rewarding fun and satisfaction.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: agriculture; bees
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1 posted on 06/17/2017 4:41:31 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

It’s a sting operation


2 posted on 06/17/2017 4:48:18 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: Kaslin

Gotta go bake biscuits...

https://huckleberryhaven.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=710


3 posted on 06/17/2017 4:55:30 AM PDT by mylife (the roar of the masses could be farts)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

It’s a sting operation

please mind your own beeswax...


4 posted on 06/17/2017 4:56:20 AM PDT by IrishBrigade
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To: IrishBrigade

I don’t understand all the buzz about Karen Pence


5 posted on 06/17/2017 5:02:45 AM PDT by mylife (the roar of the masses could be farts)
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To: Kaslin

Everything does not have to have a deep meaning. Maybe they just want some natural native honey.


6 posted on 06/17/2017 5:24:44 AM PDT by bravo whiskey (Never bring a liberal gun law to a gun fight.)
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To: Kaslin
This generation's version of Silent Spring.
7 posted on 06/17/2017 5:25:37 AM PDT by Arm_Bears (Rope. Tree. Politician/Journalist. Some assembly required.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Just because she’s the VP wife doesn’t make her a queen.
Why are you droning on about it
This could put us all in a sticky situation
This could turn out to be a sweet deal for us all
OK, I’m done
Hope DJT doesn’t use that comb
Where’s the part about the birds
Ok, now I’m done


8 posted on 06/17/2017 5:37:49 AM PDT by Keyhopper (Indians had bad immigration laws)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

“It’s a sting operation”

We get the point.


9 posted on 06/17/2017 5:42:08 AM PDT by moovova
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To: mylife

“I don’t understand all the buzz about Karen Pence”

I don’t understand the reason for all the venom in your comment.


10 posted on 06/17/2017 5:43:35 AM PDT by moovova
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To: Kaslin

All joking aside...

When do the leftist/libs start screaming about the waste of taxpayer dollars for this beehive...the way they screamed about Moocher’s Whitehouse Garden?


11 posted on 06/17/2017 5:46:37 AM PDT by moovova
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To: bravo whiskey

Natural native honey is not always what you get in the market. High-fructose corn syrup is often a very high percentage of the sweet yellow concoction sold as honey.


12 posted on 06/17/2017 6:02:31 AM PDT by JimSEA
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To: Kaslin

I just started the journey into beekeeping. My hive is about two months old and slowly growing.


13 posted on 06/17/2017 6:48:03 AM PDT by Dacula (President and CEO at Being Awesome)
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To: Kaslin

OK, think on this.....

After twenty two years as a bee keeper I sold all my stuff to a friend who in her late 60’s took up the pursuit. I spoke with her last evening at the DBHS class of 60 Seventy Five Year old Birthday bash. (we’re all 75 this year.

But I digress.....

Someone began to research the modern beekeeping practices that follow that developed years ago by A. I. Root. He developed the modern hive body that includes a brood chamber and supers for honey collection. He developed starter comb, a wax sheet rolled with the hexagonal cell imprint. The bees draw out that precise rolled pattern into the comb used for brood rearing or for storage.

It turns out Root slightly oversized the pattern dimensions.I’m not sure why but my friend told me root wanted to produce larger bees and a bigger cell allowed larger larvae.

Any way, the researcher studied wild comb and established new, smaller wax cell dimensions. A bee keeper can now buy the starter sheets with the smaller imprinted pattern. We are talking very small dimensional change here.

Bottom line, she has no mite problem with the smaller, theoretical natural instinctively cell size. Not only did the colonies cease dying, but the honey production per colony increased dramatically.

So, as beekeepers switch to the smaller wax cell pattern, the mite problem is apparently going to disappear.


14 posted on 06/17/2017 7:05:38 AM PDT by bert (K.E.; N.P.; GOPc;WASP .... The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

15 posted on 06/17/2017 7:20:08 AM PDT by Delta 21
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To: bert

That’s great news.


16 posted on 06/17/2017 7:20:56 AM PDT by JayGalt
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To: Kaslin

17 posted on 06/17/2017 9:14:46 AM PDT by DannyTN
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To: bert

Another plague not mentioned here is the Small Hive Beetle. It is about the size of a Lady Bug and makes life for the bees in the hive very miserable. It is likely the cause for a lot of mysterious absconding, especially in the late summer or fall. The Small Hive Beetle comes from sub-Sahara Africa, normally would be expected to die from freezing temperatures. It apparently overwinters as an adult in the cluster or less likely as a larva in the comb kept warm by the cluster. The mature larva leaves the hive an pupates in the soil away from the hive.

The Small Hive Beetle may be responsible for the absconding behavior of the Africanized honey bee.


18 posted on 06/17/2017 9:24:18 AM PDT by Western Phil
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To: Arm_Bears

I majored in entomology in college, and have a lifelong love and fascination with insects. I also have Asperger’s which gives me a hyper focus on my passion, in this case- the natural world, so I often notice patterns others do not see ... that said—

The valley where I live has large plantings of potatoes, among other things, and I have watched in dismay over the past 20 years as first the honey and bumblebees disappeared, then the bullfrogs disappeared, and now the butterfly and moths are almost completely gone. It is depressing to watch it happening and nothing being done to determine the cause.

I strongly suspect it is related to something being sprayed on the potato crops (grown exclusively for potato chips here abouts), in an effort to control the Colorado Potato Beetle, but I have no way to test my hypothesis. I wish someone would research this, I am too old to undertake such a study.

At least in my area we are paying a huge price for all the potato chips we eat... This is one of the rare instances when I wish a government agency would step in and require someone to do some honest tests, as I’m certain Lays and Wise, et al, would be strongly against testing...


19 posted on 06/17/2017 9:33:44 AM PDT by ladyrustic
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To: Kaslin
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
20 posted on 06/17/2017 11:15:48 AM PDT by tumblindice ("Fight for your country." Hector)
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