DarkSteven
Posts: 28072
Joined: 5/2/2008 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: DaddySatyr I don't keep bees. In fact, I'm allergic to bee stings but, I remember hearing, years ago, that the wild honey bee population in NJ had been almost completely wiped out by a mite. I'm going back something like 10-15 years. I do know that we saw a tremendous rise in honey prices but I didn't see the same type of rise in tomato, corn, or cranberry prices. Those are three of New Jersey's main crops/ag exports. Again, I'm not up on "bee stuff" but, I would be willing to be educated. It seems to me that you're saying that bees may face this same issue in just about any state, pollinating just about any crop because the pesticides are all federally "approved"? The Varroa mite. I didn't know it had damaged feral bees to that extent, but it's certainly a pest. As Ken said, tomatoes and corn are not honeybee pollinated. Except for buckwheat, no grains are bee pollinated. Even if they were honeybee pollinated, the pollination fee is likely a minor component of crop prices. quote:
ORIGINAL: Musicmystery Anecdotally, I haven't seen a honey bee here in years. Those tiny sweat bees and bumblebees pollinate my apricots in spring, and wasps are active in the garden most of the summer, along with bumblebees and a few mud bees. I've seen fewer and fewer wasps and mud bees, though, for whatever reason. But honey bees? Not a one, that I've seen. Last winter killed off some friends' backyard bee hives in neighboring counties. I visited Rapid City, SD last year. No honeybees. The summers of 2011 and 2012 were brutally hot and dry, so plants didn't produce a lot of nectar. Cold winters completed the bee kill. Summer 2013 and winter 2013-2014 were a lot better for bees.
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