Hmm. Last I heard, they had pinned it to some rare fungus that’s been spreading.Penner wrote:GrumpyCatFace wrote:No, that turned out to be a fungus.Penner wrote:
Yeah, I do know why DDT was banned but is the stuff we are spraying killing the honey bees?https://qz.com/107970/scientists-discov ... u-thought/As we’ve written before, the mysterious mass die-off of honey bees that pollinate $30 billion worth of crops in the US has so decimated America’s apis mellifera population that one bad winter could leave fields fallow. Now, a new study has pinpointed some of the probable causes of bee deaths and the rather scary results show that averting beemageddon will be much more difficult than previously thought.
Scientists had struggled to find the trigger for so-called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) that has wiped out an estimated 10 million beehives, worth $2 billion, over the past six years. Suspects have included pesticides, disease-bearing parasites and poor nutrition. But in a first-of-its-kind study published today in the journal PLOS ONE, scientists at the University of Maryland and the US Department of Agriculture have identified a witch’s brew of pesticides and fungicides contaminating pollen that bees collect to feed their hives. The findings break new ground on why large numbers of bees are dying though they do not identify the specific cause of CCD, where an entire beehive dies at once.
Here is the article:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/articl ... uthcontrib
Either way, it’s a very bad thing.