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By
Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY Honeybees are still in trouble. Over the
past year, almost 29% of honeybee hives in the But it's
still an unsustainable situation for the insects responsible for pollinating
many important food crops, according to a survey released Tuesday by the
Apiary Inspectors of America and the Department of Agriculture's Honey Bee
Lab. "This
is the third winter in a row where we've lost almost a third of the
colonies," says Dennis van-Engelsdorp, Apiary Inspectors president. The hive
loss reported was 35.8% in 2008 and 31.8% in 2007. Beekeepers start new
hives, but it's expensive and time-consuming. VanEngelsdorp worries that some
of the USA's 900 or so migratory beekeepers may go out of business because of
the losses. Bees are
dying for reasons known and unknown. The known reasons include new fungal
diseases and a parasite called the vampire mite, which was introduced from
Asia in the 1980s. What's
unknown is the phenomena called colony collapse disorder, in which healthy
worker bees fly away, leaving the hive, honey, queen and immature workers to
die. "It's altruistic suicide," van Engelsdorp says. "The
workers somehow know they're sick, and in an attempt to stop their sisters
from getting infected, they fly away." But no
one knows what's making them sick. "It
might be nutrition, new and changed pathogens, and also possibly pesticide
exposure," he says. It doesn't appear to be tied to genetically
engineered crops: Studies have shown such pollen fed to bees doesn't reduce
their longevity, he says. Honeybees
are crucial for pollination-dependent crops, such as almonds, apples,
blueberries, cranberries, pumpkins, watermelons and cucumbers, van Engelsdorp
says.
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