Six hundred thriving hives died off right in the middle of the spring
planting corn season and we are supposed to see no linkage. I am
sorry but plenty of things can go wrong during the winter. That is
totally not true in early June.
This particular demonstration provides a clean direct link between
the gross application of the neonicotinoids and bee mortality. Up to
now the inference has been clear but here conditions lined up to
optimize the kill effect directly upon application.
The fact of chronic queen bee replacement informs us that it is
clearly a systemic environmental disturbance and the only candidate
is the pesticide.
Bees dying by the
millions
By Jon Radojkovic
Wednesday, June 19,
2013 9:42:22 EDT AM
ELMWOOD - Local
beekeepers are finding millions of their bees dead just after corn
was planted here in the last few weeks. Dave Schuit, who has a honey
operation in Elmwood, lost 600 hives, a total of 37 million bees.
“Once the corn
started to get planted our bees died by the millions,” Schuit
said. He and many others, including the European Union, are pointing
the finger at a class of insecticides known as neonicotinoids,
manufactured by Bayer CropScience Inc. used in planting corn and some
other crops. The European Union just recently voted to ban these
insecticides for two years, beginning December 1, 2013, to be able to
study how it relates to the large bee kill they are experiencing
there also.
Local grower Nathan
Carey from the Neustadt, and National Farmers Union Local 344 member,
says he noticed this spring the lack of bees and bumblebees on his
farm. He believes that there is a strong connection between the
insecticide use and the death of pollinators.
“I feel like we all
have something at stake with this issue,” he said. He is organizing
a public workshop and panel discussion about this problem at his farm
June 22 at 10 a.m. He hopes that all interested parties can get
together and talk about the reason bees, the prime pollinators of so
any different plant species, are dying.
At the farm of Gary
Kenny, south west of Hanover, eight of the 10 hives he kept for a
beekeeper out of Kincardine, died this spring just after corn was
planted in neighbouring fields.
What seems to be
deadly to bees is that the neonicotinoid pesticides are coating
corn seed and with the use of new air seeders, are blowing the
pesticide dust into the air when planted. The death of millions
of pollinators was looked at by American Purdue University. They
found that, “Bees exhibited neurotoxic symptoms, analysis of
dead bees revealed traces of thiamethoxam/clothianidin in each case.
Seed treatments of field crops (primarily corn) are the only major
source of these compounds.
Local investigations
near Guelph, led to the same conclusion. A Pest Management Regulatory
Agency investigation confirmed that corn seeds treated with
clothianidin or thiamethoxam “contributed to the majority of the
bee mortalities” last spring.
“The air seeders are
the problem,” said Ontario Federation of Agriculture director Paul
Wettlaufer, who farms near Neustadt. This was after this reporter
called John Gillespie, OFA Bruce County president, who told me to
call Wettlaufer. Unfortunately, Wettlaufer said it was, “not a
local OFA issue,” and that it was an issue for the Grain Farmers of
Ontario and representative, Hennry Vanakum should be notified.
Vanakum could not be rached for comment.
Yet Guelph University
entomologist Peter Kevan, disagreed with the EU ban.
“There’s very
little evidence to say that neonicotinoids, in a very general sense,
in a broad scale sense, have been a major component in the demise of
honeybees or any other pollinators, anywhere in the world,” said
Kevan.
[
The evidence is of course circumstance but that is good enough to
hang many an innocent man. - the evidence here is now becoming
statistically significant and has been for a long time. Of course,
the purveyors are making the victims gather those statistics while
playing the denial card – arclein ]
But research is
showing that honeybee disorders and high colony losses have become a
global phenomena. An international team of scientists led by
Holland’s Utrecht University concluded that, ”Large scale
prophylaxic use in agriculture, their high persistence in soil and
water, and their uptake by plants and translocation to flowers,
neonicotinoids put pollinator services at risk.” This research and
others resulted in the Eurpean Union ban.
The United Church is
also concerned about the death of so many pollinators and has
prepared a “Take Action” paper it’s sending out to all its
members. The church is basing its action on local research. The Take
Action paper states among other things, “Scientific information
gathered suggests that the planting of corn seeds treated with
neonicotinoids contributed to the majority of the bee mortalities
that occurred in corn growing regions of Ontario and Quebec in Spring
2012.”
Meanwhile Schuit is
replacing his queen bees every few months now instead of years,
as they are dying so frequently. “OMAFRA tells me to have faith.
Well, I think it’s criminal what is happening, and it’s hard to
have faith if it doesn’t look like they are going to do anything
anyway,” Schuit says.
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