DarkSteven -> RE: People who know about gardening? (8/6/2013 2:47:34 AM)
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ORIGINAL: DesFIP There's an infestation of mites affecting honey bee colonies. It's a major problem for growers of all kinds. I'm a brand new beekeeper. Lemme chime in. The thing is called Colony Collapse Disorder. Perfectly good hives abandoned. A relatively new phenomenon, getting worse rapidly. Nobody has proven conclusively what causes it, but there's a lot of speculation. The main direct causes have been held to be the Varroa mite, and a kind of pesticide family called nicotinoids. I've heard someone say it's a parasitic fly as well. In addition, it's been hot and dry everywhere in the US, meaning that the summer nectar flows have been lacking, so bees have had less honey to get through the winter, and the normal winter hive die-off has been much worse than usual. The indirect factors are that bees have worse resistance than they should. The real money in beekeeping is in trucking the hives around for paid pollination, which makes beekeepers more than the honey, so the bees are forced into a stressful nomadic life. Also, commercial beekeepers steal all a hive's honey and give the bees sugar water instead, which is far less good for the bees (disclaimer - us backyard beekeepers use sugar water as well, but to supplement nature's nectar flow, not to replace their honey).
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