Mystery Malady Kills More
Bees, Heightening Worry on Farms
By Michael Wines, NY Times, March 28, 2013
Following a now-familiar pattern, bee deaths rose swiftly last autumn and dwindled as operators moved colonies to faraway farms for the pollination season. Beekeepers say the latest string of deaths has dealt them a heavy blow. Bret Adee, who is an owner, with his father and brother, of Adee Honey Farms of South Dakota, the nation’s largest beekeeper, described mounting losses.
Following a now-familiar pattern, bee deaths rose swiftly last autumn and dwindled as operators moved colonies to faraway farms for the pollination season. Beekeepers say the latest string of deaths has dealt them a heavy blow. Bret Adee, who is an owner, with his father and brother, of Adee Honey Farms of South Dakota, the nation’s largest beekeeper, described mounting losses.
“We lost 42 percent over the winter. But
by the time we came around to pollinate almonds, it was a 55 percent loss,” he
said in an interview here this week. “They looked beautiful in October,” Mr.
Adee said, “and in December, they started falling apart, when it got cold.”
Mr. Dahle said he had planned to bring
13,000 beehives from Montana—31 tractor-trailers full—to work the California
almond groves. But by the start of pollination last month, only 3,000 healthy
hives remained. Annual bee losses of 5 percent to 10 percent once were the norm
for beekeepers. But after colony collapse disorder surfaced around 2005, the
losses approached one-third of all bees, despite beekeepers’ best efforts to
ensure their health. Nor is the impact limited to beekeepers. The Agriculture
Department says a quarter of the American diet, from apples to cherries to
watermelons to onions, depends on pollination by honeybees. Fewer bees means
smaller harvests and higher food prices.
Almonds are a bellwether. Eighty percent
of the nation’s almonds grow here, and 80 percent of those are exported, a
multibillion-dollar crop crucial to California agriculture. Pollinating up to
800,000 acres, with at least two hives per acre, takes as many as two-thirds of
all commercial hives. This past winter’s die-off sent growers scrambling for
enough hives to guarantee a harvest. Chris Moore, a beekeeper in Kountze, Tex.,
said he had planned to skip the groves after sickness killed 40 percent of his
bees and left survivors weakened.
“But California was short, and I got a
call in the middle of February that they were desperate for just about
anything,” he said. So he sent two truckloads of hives that he normally would
not have put to work.
Bee shortages pushed the cost to farmers
of renting bees to $200 per hive at times, 20 percent above normal. That, too,
may translate into higher prices for food.
Precisely why last year’s deaths were so
great is unclear. Some blame drought in the Midwest, though Mr. Dahle lost
nearly 80 percent of his bees despite excellent summer conditions. Others cite
bee mites that have become increasingly resistant to pesticides. Still others
blame viruses.
But many beekeepers suspect the biggest
culprit is the growing soup of pesticides, fungicides and herbicides that are
used to control pests. While each substance has been certified, there has been
less study of their combined effects. Nor, many critics say, have scientists
sufficiently studied the impact of neonicotinoids, the nicotine-derived
pesticide that European regulators implicate in bee deaths.
The explosive growth of neonicotinoids
since 2005 has roughly tracked rising bee deaths.
Neonics, as farmers call them, are applied
in smaller doses than older pesticides. They are systemic pesticides, often
embedded in seeds so that the plant itself carries the chemical that kills
insects that feed on it. Older pesticides could kill bees and other beneficial
insects. But while they quickly degraded—often in a matter of
days—neonicotinoids persist for weeks and even months.
Beekeepers worry that bees carry a
summer’s worth of contaminated pollen to hives, where ensuing generations dine
on a steady dose of pesticide that, eaten once or twice, might not be
dangerous. “Soybean fields or canola fields or sunflower fields, they all have
this systemic insecticide,” Mr. Adee said. “If you have one shot of whiskey on
Thanksgiving and one on the Fourth of July, it’s not going to make any
difference. But if you have whiskey every night, 365 days a year, your liver’s
gone. It’s the same thing.”
Neonicotinoids are hardly the beekeepers’
only concern. Herbicide use has grown as farmers have adopted crop varieties,
from corn to sunflowers, that are genetically modified to survive spraying with
weedkillers. Experts say some fungicides have been laced with regulators that
keep insects from maturing, a problem some beekeepers have reported.
Eric Mussen, an apiculturist at the
University of California, Davis, said analysts had documented about 150
chemical residues in pollen and wax gathered from beehives.
“Where do you start?” Dr. Mussen said.
“When you have all these chemicals at a sublethal level, how do they react with
each other? What are the consequences?” Experts say nobody knows. But Mr. Adee,
who said he had long scorned environmentalists’ hand-wringing about such
issues, said he was starting to wonder whether they had a point.
Of the “environmentalist” label, Mr. Adee
said: “I would have been insulted if you had called me that a few years ago.
But what you would have called extreme—a light comes on, and you think, ‘These
guys really have something. Maybe they were just ahead of the bell curve.’”
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