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Friday, May 04, 2007

Could Frankencrops be killing the bees?

The South is among the regions of the United States hit hard by colony collapse disorder, in which large numbers of honeybees are dying off and disappearing, never to be seen again. The United States in recent months has lost about a quarter of its colonies, five times the typical winter losses.

The problem, which has also been documented in a number of European nations and Brazil, has enormous implications for food security and the economy, as bees pollinate more than 90 crops, including apples, soybeans, citrus fruit, peaches, blueberries and melons.

Some have blamed pesticides for poisoning the bees. Others have suggested that cell phone radiation could be disrupting the creatures' navigating systems. Yet others have pointed to a fungus.

But as Matt Hutaff notes in an article in The Simon, if pesticides or cell phones were the culprit, we would expect that the bee deaths would be a global phenomenon and would have happened years ago. CCD, on the other hand, was observed in recently months in isolated areas and then spread rapidly. Hutaff suggests another possible trigger: genetically modified crops. He observes:
Most genetically-modified seeds have a transplanted segment of DNA that creates a well-known bacterium, bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), in its cells. Normally Bt is not a problem -- it's a naturally-occurring pesticide that's been used as a spray for years by farmers looking to control crop damage from butterflies. And it's effective at helping beekeepers keep bees alive, too -- Bt is sprayed under hive lids to keep those pesky wax moths from attacking.

But "instead of the bacterial solution being sprayed on the plant, where it is eaten by the target insect, the genes that contain the insecticidal traits are incorporated into the genome of the farm crop," writes biologist and beekeeper John McDonald. "As the transformed plant grows, these Bt genes are replicated along with the plant genes so that each cell contains its own poison pill that kills the target insect.
Canadian beekeepers, for instances, have observed the disappearance of the wax moth even in hives not treated with Bt, presumably due to bees foraging in fields planted with transgenic crops. In addition, a trial of genetically modified crops in the Netherlands reportedly led to CCD in an area within about 60 miles of the test plantings.

It may not be only the transgenic nature of these crops that's to blame: Many seeds from which genetically modified crops are grown are first treated with systemic insecticides that may appear later in the plants' nectar and pollen, notes a University of Florida entomology researcher.

Grist magazine points out that CCD primarily afflicts large-scale bee operations that drive the hives across the country "chasing the bloom," with small-scale honey producers still relatively unscathed. Grist is skeptical that GM crops alone are to blame, speculating instead that a variety of factors -- including GM crops and pesticides -- may be compromising bees' immune systems, making them susceptible to whatever causes CCD. But the article ends on note both hopeful and practical:
The answer to this dire problem is delicious. Support your local foodshed -- and give extra-special love to your local honey producers.

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posted by Sue Sturgis at 4:40 PM | Email this post | Post a Comment
4 Comments:
Blogger Scorpio said...

Yes, well that was my speculation as soon as the "disorder" was announced. Wonder how much modified corn pollen attaches itself to bees.

Agricultural crop modification may well be the culprit. Companies are notoriously lax at checking the safety of their monsters.

5/05/2007 6:54 PM  
Blogger Thomas Nephew said...

Very interesting theory. But haven't GM crops been around a while too, just like cell phones?

5/09/2007 11:52 AM  
Anonymous Comrade Rutherford said...

Up here in Vermont my dad opened his three small beehives and found two empty but for a few dead bees in the corners and frames full of deformed larvae, and the third one had a few bees barely surviving. Other small VT beekeepers are reporting similar completely empty hives.

These are the small guys that do not truck their hives across the nation. No one around here can say definitively what is causing it, but since a lot of Vermont has little to no cell phone coverage and lots of BT corn (cow corn), people here tend to suspect the BT laced pollen.

5/12/2007 10:24 PM  
Anonymous Carol said...

You gotta love how cell phone radiation is often mentioned, but more like an unlikely afterthought.

As someone whose pet 'colony' collapsed alongside the proliferation of wireless technology - pets dropping like flies, one right after another (often young pets - cats, dogs, hampsters) - and as someone who developed severe electrosensitivities to any and all sources of EMF/RF within this same time period - cell phone radiation would be receiving more than a mere mention.

5/02/2008 8:05 AM  

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CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. Chris is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

SUE STURGIS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Sue is the Institute’s Editorial Director and a former reporter for The Independent Weekly and The Raleigh News & Observer.

DESIREE EVANS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Desiree is a Research Associate at the Institute and former policy analyst for TransAfrica.

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