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Scientists ask: Where are all the bees?

A Dade City beekeeper sounds a nationwide alarm as colonies mysteriously disappear.

By DAN DEWITT
Published March 3, 2007


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photo

DADE CITY - To a veteran beekeeper like David Hackenberg, it was as astonishing as seeing water flow uphill.

Last October, he left 400 hives in a field in Ruskin to feed in Brazilian pepper tree blossoms. When he returned a month later, all but 36 of the colonies had been abandoned, right down to the part of the honeycomb filled with larvae and pupae - the future of the hives.

"I could tell the whole order of things had just gone haywire," said Hackenberg, 58, who has been keeping bees since he was 12.

Hackenberg, who spread the word to scientists and other beekeepers, is credited with sounding the alarm about what may be the most devastating honeybee die-off in U.S. history.

The crisis, marked by bees mysteriously vanishing from their hives, has been identified in 24 states in every part of the country, said Jerry Hayes, Florida's chief apiary inspector; about 35 percent of Florida's colonies have disappeared, he said, with the losses concentrated in the southern half of the state, where many beekeepers from the eastern United States spend the winter.

Unless scientists can find the cause of the die-off, and a solution, its long-term consequences may be as ominous as its name: Colony Collapse Disorder.

Not only are the livelihoods of beekeepers endangered, Hayes said, but so is the estimated one-third of the nation's food supply that depends upon honeybee pollination - apples, almonds, melons, blueberries and some varieties of citrus, including grapefruit.

"Honey is a byproduct of pollination," he said. "It's wonderful and it's great, but more importantly, without honeybees taking pollen from one flower to another, that plant has no reason to build a fruit or a nut."

Scientists alerted

Even so, beekeeping remains a small and underappreciated industry, Hackenberg said, "the ugly stepchild of agriculture."

That is why Hackenberg has been so important, Hayes said. He is well-connected, opinionated, funny and, for an interview on Thursday afternoon, dressed to stand out, wearing a multicolored hat advertising his business, Hackenberg Apiary, and a large, square belt-buckle engraved with images of bees and honeycomb.

A former president of the American Beekeeping Federation, he has been on the telephone constantly in recent weeks, talking to reporters across the country from his winter headquarters in a remote corner of northwestern Pasco County.

When he began telling fellow beekeepers of his vanishing hives last fall, some were skeptical, but others told him they had been losing large numbers of bees for more than a year.

By reporting this to agriculture officials, Hayes said, Hackenberg "was the one who got this whole thing started."

In response, farming experts from several states and universities have formed an emergency working group to study the disease.

So far, the scientists know only two things for sure, said Dennis vanEnglesdorp, Pennsylvania's state apiarist: The main symptom has been the mass abandonment of hives. And the variety of fungi, viruses and mites found in collapsing hives suggests a widespread failure of the bees' immune systems.

"It's a lot like AIDS," Hackenberg said.

The rest, at this point, is conjecture, according to the study group's preliminary report.

Bees are increasingly trucked long distances to take advantage of crops, such as almonds, that pay high pollination fees. This may strain their ability to recover from infections, the report says, and expose them to a wider range of diseases and toxic chemicals.

"They forage over a large area so they pick up a lot of junk," Hayes said. "I'm surprised there's a honey bee alive."

The "prime suspect" for the collapse, according to Hackenberg, is an increasingly popular class of pesticides called neonicotinoids that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has identified as highly toxic to honeybees.

Another possible culprit, vanEnglesdorp said, is a new strain of fungus that has appeared in many of the failing hives. But both he and Hayes warned it is far too early to settle on a single cause of the outbreak.

"The awkward and frustrating thing at this point is that we're all grasping at straws," Hayes said.

Colonies disappear

Beekeepers have reported several smaller but equally mysterious collapses in the past, vanEnglesdorp said. In the 1980s, invasive mites from South American all but wiped out the feral bee population and contributed to a steep decline in U.S. beekeeping. The number of hives in Florida has since dropped from a peak of 12,000 to about 1,000 currently, Hayes said, and the number of colonies from nearly 400,000 to 279,000.

That, at least, was the count before the current collapse, which cost Hackenberg about 2,000 of his 3,000 hives - and an estimated $350,000 in lost revenue and the expense of rebuilding his stock of colonies.

By "splitting" hives, taking bees from a healthy colony to a new box with a young queen, Hackenberg has already created 400 hives. He has deposited some of these into nearby orange groves, where they will improve the harvest, produce a premium grade of honey and use the nectar to build "good, strong, boiling-over beehives that we can take up North to pollinate apples."

So, he is confident his business will survive this year, he said. "But what's going to happen next year, if whatever is causing this is still out there? What's to say the problem is not going to get bigger?"

Dan DeWitt can be reached at dewitt@sptimes.com or 352 754-6116.

[Last modified March 2, 2007, 22:36:55]


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Comments on this article
by Shawntanique 03/14/07 12:07 PM
Well as a kid I care about global warming,becuause I don't want to die.
by tink 03/14/07 12:06 PM
as a kid i want to have a $weet 16 party so i wanna live
by Debalazo 03/06/07 04:59 AM
LOOK UP THE SKIES, for Heaven's Sake, and YOURS! It's the CHEMTRAILS, killing bees, birds, fish, plants, trees, and next, US! But don't ask the Shadow Gov, you are seeing 'VISIONS', 'HALLUCINATING'.
by David 03/05/07 05:31 PM
I wonder if the bees' navigation is being impaired. Perhaps the solar flares or the earth's changing electromagnetic field is causing interference. Another possibility seems to be toxic contamination.
by Tim 03/05/07 02:02 PM
Hives are the same as colonies. I think the line 'The number of hives in Florida has since dropped from a peak of 12,000 to about 1,000 currently' should read _beekeepers_ not hives (especially given the next 2 lines).
by Tim 03/05/07 01:54 PM
CCD has actually been documented in several other contries and as early as 1915. But, to our knowlege outbreaks haven't been so widespread before, and have disappears as quickly as they have appeared.
by Tim 03/05/07 01:49 PM
Reasons given for CCD are many and even the leading experts don't really have any idea why. (Though global warming isn't a likely cause since bees are kept successully from Canada to the equator and seasonal variations are more than global warming.)
by juli 03/05/07 10:07 AM
Has anyone looked at the posability of electromagnetic disturbance? I have been reading about research being done at HAARP the military instilation in Alaska. Some sientists think it is affecting migratiry animals, could it also affect bees?
by cr 03/05/07 01:56 AM
take a look at the chemtrail issue. It is right over your heads, just google video it, or youtube, or flickr (the word 'chemtrail.' That is likely a big part of the problem. Just look up!
by Lisa 03/04/07 12:35 PM
Start working on new ways to pollinate. Bees are doomed.
by Eldon 03/04/07 08:11 AM
It is the chemicals put on seeds to keep off or kill any insect the visits that plant.
by Cherie 03/03/07 05:32 PM
How is it even legal for a beekeeper to be allowing his bees to pollenate the toxic brazillian pepper, an invasive non-native species. So much for the plants listed that are dependant on bees for production of fruit.
by A Liberal 03/03/07 04:05 PM
Hey, don't blame me! I may be allergic to bees and honey but I enjoy the flowers and food they pollinate. I enjoy watching them too.
by mark 03/03/07 02:48 PM
We are doomed. We talk but do nothing. I feel sorry for our children. They will pay for our rape on mother nature
by lisa 03/03/07 12:40 PM
Can other species of bees cause this? Or other species such as wasps or hornets?
by unk 03/03/07 12:16 PM
whats this got to do with liberals...cant believe the times would even post that grade school nonsense... i've got a hive of bees under my house that is as big as a bushell basket, can mr. hackenberg help ? can mosquito controll be the blame ???
by joe 03/03/07 12:15 PM
I had only one hive it was building stong. I open the hive there was plent of larva and honey . a week or so later no bee's no honey and dead larva . I 've never seen bee's disappear that quickly . there was no dead bee's in bottom of hive. nothing
by Wally 03/03/07 12:01 PM
If I'm not mistaken, Al Gore said this was going to happen as part of global warming.
by Katman 03/03/07 11:10 AM
I live in rural lee and have noticed the bees in this area appear confused. they have little or no sense of direction and will attack without provication which did not occur until the last year or so. the sting appears more toxic as well.
by Sandi 03/03/07 10:49 AM
And I was just remarking to my husband last week that I have never seen so many bees as we have this year. Our azaleas and roses have been inundated with them.
by Bob 03/03/07 10:21 AM
Duke said, "It's the liberals fault". That's a relief. I thought somebody was going to blame us conservatives. :)
by deano 03/03/07 10:17 AM
global warming conditions may not only bees but will cause losses in other fragile food chain needed products. can we unring the bell? unring the bell
by Duke 03/03/07 07:01 AM
It's the liberals fault.
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