2013-08-16

Scientists Discover Fungicide and Pesticide are Killing Bees―and It's Worse Than You Thought

***Fund raising again: This time we are asking for help,  for a total of $450 by the first of Sept.  The balance is still the same as yesterday.  August is return to school time and tourists are leaving so no jewelry sales so far for August.  The fires ate up our summer tourism season and now its almost over.

If we have contributed in anyway to you and you wish for us to continue, and you can afford it, we ask that you contribute to this effort, over on the right hand side of the blog using the pay pal button. Please do what you can, since we understand as much as anyone, the times we live in, but to keep going we must have help.  Thank you so much and Bless you for all your support in this massive effort.  We can not do this without you. 

Vatic Note:  I find it amazing just how prescient our foreign occupied, Homeland Security  is.  It has been over the past 3 to 4 years that they have been screaming bloody murder about famine coming, and riots over food, and how they have  to stock up on ammo, military equipment, etc etc etc.   You get the drift.  Fear fear fear that they created.  Where were the agricorps whose crops are being affected by this?   Not a peep out of them.  They all seem to be doing well financially feeding us toxins?  I bet they get their money from the chemical companies.

Its the small real farmer, producing "real" food, that is being harmed by this and has been sounding the alarm and no one, until now, has paid any attention.  Meanwhile, as Haarp induced floods, droughts, earthquakes, sinkholes, massive fires that are weird per the fire fighters, are added to this below, our small farmer is disappearing, leaving us with the GMO supporting agricorps that have no clue how to grow and tender "healthy NON GMO"  food that will strengthen  and sustain us.

Is this just another piece of the overall mass depopulation plan on the drawing board since before 1974 when the Georgia guidestones were put up by the very wealthy "LUCIFERIAN" society? I wonder how many agricorps are represented at the Bilderberg Group?  I bet that would be a good rabbit hole to go down. I bet I know what we would find.....

The chemical Co owners pretending to be regular business people just trying to make a buck, when in fact, most of those chemical companies are owned by the ILLUMINATI FAMILIES.... dupont, I.G. Farban, Monsanto, who ranks among the worst and now they are seriously, feloniously responsible for the possible genocide of a whole species and worse, they would have known about it.  No wonder ELF WENT AFTER THEM SO VICIOUSLY. But not vicious enough it appears. 

Scientists Discover Fungicide and Pesticide are Killing Bees―and It's Worse Than You Thought 
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2013/08/13/fungicide-bee-killings.aspx?e_cid=20130813Z1_DNL_art_2&utm_source=dnl&utm_medium=email&utm_content=art2&utm_campaign=20130813Z1
by Dr. Mercola
                                                          
Bee populations are dwindling across the globe, putting one in three food crops like apples and almonds, which depend on pollination from bees, at serious risk.
In the US, beekeepers have reported annual losses of about 33 percent of their hives each year, a level of loss that the Agricultural Research Services reports could threaten the economic viability of the bee pollination industry if it continues1 (and some beekeepers report much higher losses than this at upwards of 70 or, in some cases, 100 percent).
Despite the growing losses, the causes of the massive bee die-offs have yet to be firmly defined, although accumulating research is pointing to a cocktail of agricultural chemicals as a likely primary culprit.

New Study: Fungicides May Be Killing Bees

Systemic neonicotinoid pesticides have been increasingly blamed for bee deaths (and were implicated in a recent mass bee die-off of 25,000 bumblebees along with millions of bee deaths in Canada), prompting the European Union (EU) to ban them for two years.
Now, it appears measures that target single classes of pesticides, though a move in the right direction, may be falling short. In a first-of-its-kind study, researchers analyzed pollen from bee hives in seven major crops and found 35 different pesticides along with high fungicide loads.2 Each sample contained, on average, nine different pesticides and fungicides, although one contained 21 different chemicals.
Furthermore, when the pollen was fed to healthy bees, they had a significant decline in the ability to resist infection with the Nosema ceranae parasite, which has been implicated in Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD).
What makes the research particularly unique is the concerning data on fungicides, which has so far been assumed to be safe for bees. While farmers are advised to avoid spraying pesticides when bees are present, for instance, fungicides contain no such warnings.
The researchers explained:
“While fungicides are typically seen as fairly safe for honey bees, we found an increased probability of Nosema infection in bees that consumed pollen with a higher fungicide load. Our results highlight a need for research on sub-lethal effects of fungicides and other chemicals that bees placed in an agricultural setting are exposed to.”
Also concerning, the researchers found that the bees in the study collected pollen almost exclusively from weeds and wildflowers, and this, too, was contaminated with pesticides even though they were not directly sprayed.
“It’s not clear whether the pesticides are drifting over to those plants but we need take a new look at agricultural spraying practices,” the study’s lead author told Quartz.3

US Bill Introduced to Take Neonicotinoids Off the Market

Following the June incident that killed 25,000 bumblebees, the Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA) announced that they were restricting the use of 18 pesticide products containing dinotefuran, a type of neonicotinoid.
These chemicals are typically applied to seeds before planting, allowing the pesticide to be taken up through the plant’s vascular system as it grows. As a result, the chemical is expressed in the pollen and nectar of the plant, and hence the danger to bees and other pollinating insects.
As mentioned, the EU has also banned these pesticides, beginning December 1, 2013, to study their involvement with large bee kills they, too, are experiencing.
To date, however, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has failed to take action and has already been sued once by beekeepers and environmental groups for failing to protect bees from neonicotinoid pesticides.   (VN: of course they have failed to do anything, they are part of the felonious revolving door between the chemical/agricorp industry and the regulating industry.  Its a crime, but no prosecution, no exec branch enforcement of the crimes occurring, and yet they will shoot an unarmed old man for spitting on the sidewalk.  I am disgusted.)



They have also green-lighted another pesticide that is a close cousin to these toxic chemicals (sulfoxaflor) and, as a result, several beekeeping organizations and beekeepers have filed a legal action against the EPA for approving sulfoxaflor, which is considered by many to be a "fourth-generation" neonicotinoid.
In the US, the tide may be turning, however, as just last month the “Save America’s Pollinators Act” was introduced. If passed, this bill, HR 2692, would require the EPA to pull neonicotinoid pesticides from the market until their safety is proven. Please contact your representative today to voice your support for this incredibly important issue.  (VN: It may also be turning because food patriots are out in force burning GMO killer crops.  Yahoo, give them the medal of Freedom.  If Satantically baptized magog Bush Sr can be given such a medal for doing mayhem and murder, than why not the ELF like groups burning sugar beet crops.  We need more such courageous young people).

US Almond Crops Are Already At Risk

We’re beginning to get a taste of what the world would be like without bees. This year, many of the 6,000 almond orchard owners in California simply could not find enough bees to pollinate their almond trees, at any price.
This is alarming, considering that 80 percent of the world’s almonds come from California’s central valley, an 800,000-acre area of almond orchards that are 100 percent dependent on bees pollinating the trees. Surprisingly, almonds are the number one agricultural product in California.
Fortunately, unsurpassed efforts that included persuading beekeepers as far away as Florida to ship their bees cross country, delayed bloom, and unseasonably good weather thereafter allowed almond growers to dodge the bullet – this year – despite having fewer and weaker-than-ever hives...
This narrowly achieved success may lead some to reach the mistaken conclusion that beekeepers’ concerns are overblown, but don’t be fooled. One beekeeper went so far as to say he believes the beekeeper industry is doomed and cannot survive for more than another two to three years unless drastic changes are implemented immediately...

What Are Some of the Top Theories for Bee Die-Offs?

Environmental chemicals are a forerunner for what’s causing so many bees to die, but it’s likely that there are multiple factors at play here. Among the top proposed culprits include:
  • Pesticides, insecticides and fungicides – Neonicotinoids, such as Imidacloprid and Clothianidin, kills insects by attacking their nervous systems. These are known to get into pollen and nectar, and can damage beneficial insects such as bees. 
  • Malnutrition/Nutritional deficiencies – Many beekeepers place the hives near fields of identical crops, which may result in malnutrition as the bees are only getting one type of nectar. Essentially, this theory is identical to that of human nutrition; we need a wide variety of nutrients from different foods. 
    If you keep eating the same limited range of foods, you can easily end up suffering from nutritional deficiencies. Poor nutrition suppresses immune function, making the bees far more susceptible to toxins from pesticides, viruses, fungi, or a combination of factors that ultimately kill them.
  • Viruses and fungi – There's even the possibility that some new form of "AIDS-like" viral infection is affecting the bees. 
  • Electromagnetic fields (EMFs) – Researchers have discovered that when a cellular phone is placed near a hive, the radiation generated by it (900-1,800 MHz) is enough to prevent bees from returning to them, according to a study conducted at Landau University several years ago.4 
    More recently, a study published in 2011 found that the presence of microwaves from cell phones have a dramatic effect on bees, causing them to become quite disturbed.5
  • Lack of natural foraging areas – Mass conversions of grasslands to corn and soy in the Midwest has dramatically reduced bees’ natural foraging areas. 
  • Genetically modified (GM) crops – In 2007, a German study demonstrated that horizontal gene transfer appears to take place between the GM crop and the bees that feed on it.6 When bees were released in a field of genetically modified rapeseed, and then fed the pollen to younger bees, the scientists discovered the bacteria in the guts of the young ones mirrored the same genetic traits as ones found in the GM crop.

You Can Start Helping Bees Right in Your Own Backyard

The Pollinator Partnership has revealed many ways you can help the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations.7 Clearly major steps need to be taken on a national level to protect pollinators from toxic chemicals and other threats, and you can help in this regard by supporting the Save America’s Pollinators Act.
Friends of the Earth has also launched the Bee-Action Campaign to tell stores to take bee-killing pesticides like neonicotinoids off of their shelves, and you can help by signing their petition now.
That said, you can even make a difference right in your own backyard:
  • Reduce or eliminate your use of pesticides 
  • Plant a pollinator-friendly garden by choosing a variety of plants that will continue flowering from spring through fall; check out the Bee Smart Pollinator App for a database of nearly 1,000 pollinator-friendly plants 
  • Choose plants native to your region and stick with old-fashioned varieties, which have the best blooms, fragrance and nectar/pollen for attracting and feeding pollinators 
Finally, if you would like to learn even more about the economic, political and ecological implications of the worldwide disappearance of the honeybee, check out the extremely informative documentary film Vanishing of the Bees.

The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

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