
Vanishing Bee Colonies, Doomsday Scenarios, and Sunspots
Published: 6/8/2007 at http://www.buzzle.com/
Albert Einstein once said : “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.”
Apocalyptic for sure. We haven’t reached that point yet, but some worrisome indicators suggest dramatic drops in the bee population of the US are likely to impact crop production. This is not a small agricultural sector that is being impacted either. In the US bees pollinate more than $14 billion worth of seeds and crops each year.
The disappearing bee phenomena isn’t restricted to the US. In Europe countries are experiencing varying degrees of what investigators describe as “colony collapse disorder” (or CCD). Countries effected include Germany, Switzerland, Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece. However the most serious losses have occurred in the US. On the West Coast keepers have seen bee population losses in the 30 to 60 percent range. On the East Coast and Texas it gets as high as 70%. These are catastrophic drops for an industry that considers around a 20% population decline to be an off-season norm.
There are a number of different theories about why this is happening. After looking at a cross-section of scientific opinion I tend toward the view that the decline in the bee population is being triggered by a variety of factors, rather than a single overriding cause.
There is evidence that the immune system of bees has been adversely effected by modern agricultural practices. These range from use of insecticides to the controlled raising of bees in order to have an army of pollinators ready to service crops on schedule. Some researchers take the view that genetically modified crops are a contributing factor in bee population decline. Stress figures into it too, given that increased pressure is being placed on colonies as their habitat is squeezed each year due to urban development. Parasites are also an issue. The varroa mite introduced from Asia has proved to be problematic.
The decline in the health of the colonies can be demonstrated by research data. You know the problem has reached crisis levels when a guy like Dennis van Englesdorp with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture uses an Aids analogy in an attempt to underscore the seriousness of the threat to bee populations.
Researchers have discovered multiple infections co-existing in some colonies, many of which were also infected with fungi, an indicator that the bees’ immune systems were seriously compromised. This compromised immune function may be related to genetically modified crops and scientists are currently working to try to determine any possible links. When you look at the stats though, on the surface there does seem to be a generalized cause and effect pattern. In the US, which has experienced the most severe bee losses, 40% of the corn is now a GM insect-resistant strain. By contrast in Germany we are only talking about 0.06%, mostly grown in the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Brandenburg regions.
A number of earlier studies investigated whether or not GM crops were having a negative impact on bees. One such study took place at the University of Jenna from 2001 to 2004. The researchers used a GM maize variant named “BT corn” that includes a gene from a soil bacterium in order to make it insect-proof. At first the study seemed entirely positive. No discernible negative effects were detected in the bees from the BT corn. Then researchers discovered that when the bees were attacked by a parasite, the portion of the colony exposed to the BT corn had a much lower ability to fight off infection and showed much more rapid levels of decline.
There is a second set of factors though that raises concerns about quantum-mechanical effects related to magnetic fields and electromagnetic waves. The majority of losses have been occurring as a result of bees being unable to navigate back to their hives. Bees have been expiring singly, in a seemingly disoriented state far from the hive and this can’t simply be attributed to immune system issues.
There are two possible causes. One being our high-tech gadgetry, particularly mobile phone technology. The other cause odd though it may seem, relates to so-called “sunspots” – the effect of solar activity.
At first glance it seems a bit far-fetched to make a connection between the life of bees and mobile phones. However research suggests there may indeed be something to this theory. German research has determined that bees showed a marked change of behavior when in the vicinity of power lines, and a study conducted at Landau University found that bees avoided returning to the hive when mobile phones were placed nearby.
A study by the mathematician Barbara Shipman, provides one of the more fascinating … one might even say ‘esoteric’ theories. A critical aspect of bee activity hinges obviously upon finding pollen sources and returning to the hive. According to Ms Shipman this routine is facilitated by the dance the bees perform. She indicates that the dance is influenced by factors such as the polarization of the light of the sun and variations in the earth’s magnetic field.
She goes further though and suggests bees are capable of identifying quarks. I think it’s a leap to suggest that bees can ‘perceive’ the quantum field or even use it as a type of frame of reference. My hunch is that their activity is pretty much instinctual, based upon their highly specialized circuitry. Questions about whether or not they can perceive quarks seems almost a moot point, especially since there is no way of proving it.
Where the sunspot theory does hold up is that bees appear to be very sensitive to energy fluctuations. One study exposed a colony to bursts from a high-intensity magnetic field and concluded that the bees’ reactions revealed a high sensitivity to nuclear magnetic resonance, or NMR. This occurs when an electromagnetic wave alters the orientation of the nuclei of atoms.
Some scientists take the view that the next solar maximum may be one of the most intense ever. Mausumi Dikpati, an astronomer with the National Center for Atmospheric Research predicts a solar maximum for 2012, a phenomena that last occurred in 1958. The sunspot generates intense magnetism that can be felt on the earth. Dikpati even believes that it is possible electronics will be effected, for example GPS and mobile phone technology. Since solar cycle 24 began in 2007 according to Mausumi’s estimate, it’s possible that the behavior of bees is already being effected to some degree.
The dramatic declines in the bee population appear to be due to a combination of factors. Insecticides, crop engineering, shrinking habitats and parasites have impacted the overall health and immune system of bees. The other factor contributing to bee decline relates most probably to side-effects of technology and solar activity.
The article states:
“Since solar cycle 24 began in 2007 according to Mausumi’s estimate, it’s possible that the behavior of bees is already being effected to some degree.”
We are nearly half way through 2008 and the shift from SC23 sunspots to predominently SC24 sunspots looks to be a good ways off. The current “Tiny Tim” sunspot visible now is an SC23 spot. In fact, the current averaged number of sunspots for the SC23/SC24 transition has been BELOW the transition minimums of both the SC21/SC22 and SC22/SC23 transitions for about a year now.
See
http://www.leif.org/research/Most%20Recent%20IMF,%20SW,%20and%20Solar%20Data.pdf
for a comparison of the current transition with the previous two (courtesy of Leif Svalgaard).
“…bees avoided returning to the hive when mobile phones were placed nearby.”
Do cellphones broadcast when not in use? i thought they were passive. Seems to me that the cellphone signal is in the ‘ether’ regardless if there is a cellphone nearby. If cellphones don’t broadcast when not in use I’m not sure what affect placing one near a hive whould have.
REPLY: The digital cellphone broadcast bursts to announce their presence about once a minute
What some scientists say is missing from the debate is historical context. “Every time there are these disappearances, the ills of the moment tend to be held accountable,” said May Berenbaum, who heads the entomology department at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and led a National Academy of Sciences review of the status of North American bees and other pollinators that was published last year.
“In the ’60s it was synthetic organic insecticides,” Dr. Berenbaum said. “In the ’70s it was Africanized bee genes. In the 19th century, there is a wonderful report about this resulting from a lack of moral fiber. Weak character was why they weren’t returning to the hives.”
http://www.thirteen.org/scienceandnature/silence-of-the-bees
Cyclical. Natural. Relax.
i bet einstein liked honey too! …he’s a pretty smart guy though…maybe we should listen! I love how anyone can make a prediction about how the world is going to end and everyone completely ignores it until something crazy happens with black and yellow insects…
Are there extra points to figure out what insect is on the flower pictured above?
way off topic: is there a place where I can graph all the various temperature records? Or is there a place where the data is kept so I can put it into excel and do it myself? I’m talking about RSS, GISS, UAH, etc.
see resources link at top of page.
In case someone might be interested, GISS May is out:
GISTEMP 5-2008: +0.36 °C
That’s pretty cool for them!
terry;
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/sidc-ssn/normalise/from:1950/plot/hadcrut3vgl/from:1950/plot/esrl-co2/normalise
austin,
That’s interesting – here in Germany I have also noticed the return of bees this spring.
Bill,
Cellphones have been on various hit-lists for around a decade.
“Re: Colorado bees. The Western Colorado Honey Company was the biggest producer on the western slope about ten years ago, when I spoke to its owner. It was a family-run operation, and Paul Limbach told me how his father and he used to bring in many harvests of about 125 pounds from each “super”, the comb-and-honey-filled second story above each hive box. That was in the 50’s and 60’s. At the time of my interview, he said they were lucky to get 50-pound harvests from each super. Don’t know how that’s changed in the last ten years.”
My best harvest was in 1998 during a very hot and dry spring. I was extracting honey every two weeks.
This was a year where:
1. Very high sweetclover production.
2. Bees could fly everyday due to no clouds/rain.
3. The hot dry air helped with evaporation and curing of the nectar brought by the bees.
pierre: you rule! thanks!
We may be overthinking the problem. I recently read somewhere that the disappearance of bees is not unprecedented. That die-offs like this happen every several decades and that old-time bee keepers are familiar with this.
I don’t know if this is true and I can’t find the story where I originally read this.
john A: “What ever happened to inductive reasoning?”
Good question. Back in the 60’s it was still in “draft” form. You’d think they’d have it all hammered out by now.
Speakin’ of the 60’s maybe the sun is thinkin’ bout em too. Like, maybe it would rather be dead than red? It certainly ain’t yella — just looks that way to earthlings. Can never convince some folks who’d tather be green with envy, uh yup.
(*ahem*) Now back to our regularly scheduled postings.
I see that el-Visitidor posted a comment that made note of past bee die-offs. Here is the URL for a NY Times story regarding die-offs in the past:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/17/science/17bees.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Actually…there is another theory. HITCHHIKER’S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY had it wrong…it is not the mice who were the secret masters of Earth’s destiny. It was the bees. They are departing now right before the Vogons demolish Earth to make way for a new hyperspace bypass. No doubt, someone will find a message from the bees: “So long, and thanks for all the pollen.”
See Elizabeth Kolbert’s article on bees at: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/08/06/070806fa_fact_kolbert?currentPage=1
It has been a year since I read it but I believe that a virus is found to be the cause and this has happened in the past–like maybe 14 times since the Revolution. In any case the artcile is a fun read.
Why is it, pray tell, that bees seem to think I am a target worth stinging? I have been stung every year of my fricken life. I wear no perfume, have flashing orange-copper-red-blond-brown long hair, and generally make a lot of noise wherever I go. Bees find me. All kinds. Honey bees, yellow jackets, hornets, black horse flies, whatever. If it has a stinger or biter, I will get it. They crawl up my shirt and sting. They sting my feet. My legs. They fly into my car and sting my cheek as I’m driving along. They sting my hand lazily held out the window as I am driving along. And they chase me from one end of the field to the other. I like honey as much as the next person, but I wish they would get the hint!!!! At 52, I have NO POLLEN LEFT!!!!!!
It is a very interesting issue,I’ve been doing some research about sunspot and it’s implications on the production of crops;now I came across this debate by surfing the internet.You did a good job.By the way,I am writing a book about these matter and would be gratful if you give me your permission to copy this article.I will write a note of aknowledgement in your name;I apreciate you.
Trully;Thank you very much.
Reply: The article is not the property of this site owner. The original can be found here.
And Al Gore is obviously the Vogon stealth bureaucrat sent to soften up any resistance, which is, of course, useless.
Pam,
Interesting. I think it has to do with attitude. For a mental exercise look into a fish tank and establish eye contact with the fish. Give them complete respect. Admire their beauty.
Do not try the above with cows. I tried for 6 months. I lost most of my respect for them.
Ok mixing of metaphors is allowed. Mixing of sci fi metaphors~I’m going to have to consult Anthony. We may have to modify the board policy.
REPLY: Scifi notables are ok as long as it isn’t referencing Battlestar Galactica or Plan 9 from Outer Space.
jeez, you make me laugh. But i was completely serious.
Never mind jeez, delete my previous comment. I forgot the Vogon post (I do admire their poetry though).
Pamela Gray
Why is it, pray tell, that bees seem to think I am a target worth stinging?
You’r too darn sweet.