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Mystery of the dying bees

7 March 2007

Cosmos Online


Something mysterious is killing honey bees, and even as billions are dropping dead across North America, researchers are scrambling to find answers and save one of the most important crop pollinators on Earth.


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Mystery of the dying bees

One of the most important crop pollinators in the world, honey bees in the United States have been decimated in recent months by a mysterious disease.

Credit: Jon Sullivan/Wikipedia

The almond trees are blooming and the bees are dying, and nobody knows why. All up and down California's vast San Joaquin Valley, nearly 2,500 square kilometres of small nut trees arranged in laser-straight rows are shaking off the cobwebs of winter. They're gearing up once again to produce nearly half a billion kilograms of nuts, worth US$3 billion to the U.S. economy.

The trees cannot produce the bounty on their own, however. They need bees - a million hives worth - trucked in from nearly forty U.S. states to move pollen from one tree to another, fertilising the blooms in the largest managed pollination event on Earth.

But even as the beekeepers reap record fees for renting their hives, their livelihood is now threatened by the largest loss of honey bees in the history of the industry.

Since October 2006, 35 per cent or more of the United States' population of the Western honey bee (Apis mellifera) - billions of individual bees - simply flew from their hive homes and disappeared.

When the almonds were being plucked from the trees late last year, Gene Brandi of Los Banos, California had 2,000 hives, but by late February he had just 1,200 - a loss of 40 per cent.

And Brandi is one of the more fortunate. Across the 24 U.S. states affected by the mysterious phenomenon, losses have ranged up to 90 per cent. "I've had a couple of yards where I've had 200 hives and they're down to 10 hives that are alive," says David Bradshaw of Visalia, about 180 kilometres southeast of Los Banos along California's Route 99.

What's causing the carnage, however, is a total mystery; all that scientists have come up with so far is a new name for the phenomenon - Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) - and a list of symptoms.

In hives hit by CCD, adult workers simply fly away and disappear, leaving a small cluster of workers and the hive's young to fend for themselves. Adding to the mystery, nearby predators, such as the wax moth, are refraining from moving in to pilfer honey and other hive contents from the abandoned hives; in CCD-affected hives the honey remains untouched.

The symptoms are baffling, but one of the emerging hypotheses is that the scourge is underpinned by a collapse of the bees' immune systems. Stressed out by cross-country truck journeys and drought, attacked by viruses and introduced parasites, or whacked out by harmful new pesticides, some researchers believe the bees' natural defences may have simply given way. This opens the door to a host of problems that the bees can normally suppress.

What's surprising is that mysterious declines are nothing new. As far back as 1896, CCD has popped up again and again, only under the monikers: 'fall dwindle' disease, 'May dwindle', 'spring dwindle', 'disappearing disease', and 'autumn collapse'.

Even the current outbreak has possibly been going on undetected for two years, according to the CCD Working Group - a crack group of U.S. researchers from institutes including the Pennsylvania State University and University of Montana, who are trying to unravel the mystery.

What has made the members of the Working Group - as well as conservationists, beekeepers, and farmers - really sit up and notice is the scale of this year's decimation; something in the environment has allowed CCD to reach an unprecedented scale that threatens the very survival of the pollination industry.

"We have never seen a die-off of this magnitude with this weird symptomology," says Maryann Frazier, a bee researcher at Pennsylvania State University. "We've seen bees disappear over time and dwindle away, but not die-off so quickly."

Asian mites and latent viruses

A problem preventing clear identification of CCD is that honey bees are already under threat from manifold foes.

Even without CCD, the number of managed hives in the U.S. has dwindled by nearly 50 per cent since the industry's peak in the 1970s. The main culprit for the die-offs is a tiny Asian mite. Known as Varroa destructor to scientists and the 'vampire mite' to beekeepers, these tiny parasites - circular, crab-like arachnids about the size of a bee's eyeball - have been quietly parasitising the Asiatic honey bee (Apis cerana) in Southeast Asia for millennia.

<i>Varroa destructor</i>
Varroa destructor, a tiny tick-like arachnid, has been wreaking havoc on U.S. honey bees since it was inadvertently introduced from Asia in the 1980s.
Scott Bauer/Wikipedia

Some time in the early 1980s, though, the mites hitched a ride to America and hopped on new hosts - spreading like wildfire throughout the defenceless Western honey bee population with the help of migratory beekeepers who obligingly trucked them around the country. The mites suck the vital juices out of both developing and adult bees, and left unchecked can kill a hive within 12 months.

In addition to the damage that the mites do themselves, they also spread viruses. Furthermore, the mites appear to assist the viruses by somehow sabotaging the bees' immune system.

"There's something about a mite feeding on a bee that just knocks its immune system out. [Then] the viruses can take over," says Eric Mussen, a bee researcher at the University of California, Davis.

But mites and their viruses have been infecting U.S. honey bees for nearly 30 years. What has experts worried is that CCD kills bees even more efficiently than mites - destroying a healthy colony in a matter of weeks.


Readers' comments

Great post

This is a really good post

Time to Wake Up, Yes!

We as humans are so busy acting as though we are God but not at all acting in a Godly manner. I grew up in the concrete jungle aka NYC. Nature does not exist as it should there. It is a mass of rushing and kill anything that gets in your way.
I am an adult now married with a child and we recently moved to a very rural area. Talk about nature shock. There are animals in our back yard, insects like you wouldn't believe, and yes, the beautiful bumble bee.
I am ashamed of myself for being so selfish. We share this planet with other creatures. We have the ability to care for the other creatures as well but instead we extermintate.
I am not a millionare so I am not moving to Mars. But I am going to ask God for forgiveness, move on, and stop living as a parasite and start being what humans are supposed to be. I don't mean to sound corny, but we can all live by setting an example and not live as the sheep being led to slaughter. The bees situation is another cry from the earth and it is time to wake up.

Do better Job, Cosmos

I am sorry to say that, but this study is doing a poor job. A couple of questions that I would try to answer before writing something like this:
- are the bees dying only in the US, or across Americas or across the whole World?
- are the bees dying in areas characterized by some special features - for example in areas where most GM-food is grown?
- are the bees dying only in industrial bee-keepers - i.e. those that are moved around the US, or does it affect all bee keepers?

From what I've read on the forum - bees are not dying in Europe and Europe is a very unpopular place for GM-food, as people simply don't want to eat it (have you ever heard about European food tasting better - if not then go there and experience it yourself).

Genetically Modified food is the prime suspect in my opinion. This article doesn't even mention that.

You're being too simplistic

Thanks for your comments. You may be convinced that GM food is causing the bee die off, but there's no evidence of this.

To say that Europeans don't like GM food, and bees are not dying out in Europe, so therefore GM food is killing bees - well, that's too simplistic. Just because two things are correlated does not mean they are linked. There's a high correlatation between drownings and high levels of ice cream consumption; that does not mean eating ice cream causes drowing. It's just that both occur a lot more during summer.

This article is not a study, it's a piece of journalism. It seeks to bring together news of a new development, and discuss some of the possible causes. But it is based on scientific studies; if there's a lack of scientific data, we cannot report on data that isn't there. We should not presuppose something is happening if there's no evidence for it.

When there have been studies, and more evidence becomes available, we'll report it.

Editor-in-Chief

Yes, but....

Yes, but finding that correlation between two things is a start. That is how all theories are made and then research follows. I don't see it as simplistic, I see it as being a start in a direction that could lead to answers. They may or may not be connected. Thats what research can hopefully show us. To me, common sense says that of course ice cream does not lead to drownings. But when we alter one form of nature, other forms of nature will be altered as well. It's not simplistic. It is very much complex, far beyond our current understanding.

And, I am sure when new research becomes available, you will report it as you said. And you are right, this is journalism and not research. I dont know if that poster meant cosmos magazine was being too simplistic thinking that you are doing the research or what, but please report it when more info comes out!

sammie

Bee deaths

I am an Australian bee keeper and as far I know the die of is only happening in the US. We have our share of diseases here too but there are some differences. As yet American foulbrood disease is not widespread here and is well controlled. We have had small incursions of asian bees from new guinea that carry all sorts of things and there have been 1 or 2 instances of verroa mite in the north, but almost nothing really. However verroa is all over the US. A lot of our honey comes from vast tracts of forest and hives are well spaced slowing the spread of disease. I doubt GM foods have anything to do with it, its probably a combination of verroa and Aspergillus. and agriculture herbicides could be damaging the immune system of bees. In the US i think the scale of mono farming and pollination is a problem as the more hives within bee flight the greater and faster the spread of disease. Also a lot of farmers keep a couple hives for pollination and do not follow the strict guidlines in managing these hives. And the mixing of those bees at water with bees bought in for pollination introduces problems. Anyway the largest producer of honey is China, and I dont know how your FDA allows that polluted garbage into your country and lets you eat it. In Australia you have to be rich just to meet the mandatory BQUAL quality assurance before you can sell a drop of honey.
I suppose if the US honey industry dies and your FDA finally bans china, I can corner the US market and retire!

To dismiss genetically

To dismiss genetically altered food as the source, just because there is no evidence, means nothing. Testing on the effects of GM foods, especially crops grown with "death Genes" for Insecticidal purposes such as BT Corn for the corn beetle, GM potatoes to kill the potato beetle, GM Cotton, some new within the past few years can not be ruled out. Government testing is dated, way behind GM technology and not extensive enough. Although the gene may be tested for safety with some organisms, it is not extensive enough in tracing effects on pollen throught the plant family or generations of insects. I also don't believe we even have enough history to understand the effects of killer gene pollen and plant matter. They are too new and introduction of these crops are premature, especially when considering they have the potential of affecting the very base of our food chain such as bees, or other important feed insects for birds, fish or amphibians, not to mention long term implications to soil or water. Killer genes have been introduced into crops with outdated testing and bees pollinate those crops. This is not being considered a possible cause of bee die off? I'm sure research is done, just not in public - yet. Money is a first priority too often with today's corporations and moral responsibility sadly, comes second. GM crops in my opinion, should be the first thing looked at for bees dying at such a fast rate.

Bees

Could it be eco-terrorism?

Bees

We are eating all of their food/royal jelly, pollen and honey.

Bees

Please read Silent Spring by Rachel Carson.
Pesticides kill everything in it's path
whether it be a good insect or bad.