Famine?
Igor Loving
lovingigor at hotmail.com
Mon Mar 28 11:10:26 EST 2005
monday, March 28, 2005
More than $15 billion in U.S. crops rides each year on the tiny legs of an
insect.
The honeybee is the major carrier of pollen for seeded fruits and just about
anything that grows on a vine. Everything, in other words, from apples to
zucchini.
The bee crisis
Audio: WPB beekeeper focuses on raising queens
The varroa mite has killed or severely weakened an estimated 40 percent to
60 percent of honeybees in the United States during the past six months.
Millions of acres of U.S. fruit, nut, vegetable, seed and legume crops
depend on insect pollination. An estimated 80 percent of insect crop
pollination is accomplished by honeybees.
Crops that require bees for pollination include apples, avocados,
blueberries, cherries, cranberries, oranges, grapefruit, sunflowers,
tangerines and watermelon. In addition, the production of most beef and
dairy products depends on alfalfa, clover and other plants that require
pollination.
Honeybees are ideal for pollination because they can be managed easily and
moved to where they are needed. They also will pollinate a wide variety of
crops without harming the plants.
Sources: American Beekeeping Federation, U.S. Department of Agriculture
"If honeybees ceased to exist, two-thirds of the citrus, all of the
watermelons, the blueberries, strawberries, pecans and beans would
disappear," said Jerry Hayes, apiary inspection chief with the state's
Division of Plant Industry.
But now it's the bee itself that is disappearing.
Under attack from a Southeast Asian parasite, vast numbers of the creatures
are dying off, worried industry experts say. More than 50 percent of the
bees in California, critical to the success of the Golden State's almond
crop, have died during the past six months. Frantic growers there have sent
out the call around the world, including Florida, for hives.
Not only California is suffering the ravages of the determined pest. As many
as 40 percent to 60 percent of the bees nationwide have perished during the
same six-month period, experts say.
"It's the biggest crisis that has ever faced the U.S. beekeeping industry,"
said Laurence Cutts of Chipley, president of the Florida State Beekeepers
Association and a retired apiary inspector with the state Department of
Agriculture.
Cutts lost two-thirds of his beehives to the predator, an eight-legged
animal no bigger than a grain of salt that attaches itself to a bee and
slowly sucks out its internal fluids.
The pest is the varroa mite, which has been in the United States since 1986,
when it first showed up in Florida. But the pace of devastation has
increased only during the past year. An entire hive can be wiped out within
less than a year as the parasites, colloquially known as "vampire mites,"
lodge in a hive and begin to reproduce.
"The varroa mites have become resistant to the chemicals we use to kill
them," said Loxahatchee beekeeper Mark McCoy.
McCoy is one of hundreds of beekeepers from around the country and as far
away as Australia who responded to California's need for an additional
400,000 hives. He packed up more than 1,500 hives, housing 30 million-plus
bees, last month and shipped them west on two flatbed semis.
"The bees are the only tool we have to pollinate the trees," said Colleen
Aguiar, a spokeswoman for the California Almond Board, based in Modesto.
The state grows about 80 percent of the global almond crop, which is some 1
billion pounds of nuts a year. It takes 1.2 million hives to pollinate those
groves, Aguiar said.
And almonds are only the beginning of the crisis. Apple growers in Virginia
normally call on their own state's beekeepers for pollination help, but not
this year, said Troy Fore, executive director of the 1,200-member American
Beekeeping Federation Inc., based in Jesup, Ga.
"Now those apple growers have also turned to Florida beekeepers to provide
pollination because they have lost bees in Virginia to the mite," Fore said.
But Florida itself needs its bees, and some industry observers suggest it
might already have given away too many.
"I really think you will see a crunch here in Florida in a couple of
months," said David Hackenberg, who operates hives in Dade City and
Lewisburg, Pa. "A lot of guys have lost a lot of bees. The watermelon guys
are just starting and they are already scrambling for bees."
Hackenberg and others in the business said the state's largest beekeeper,
Horace Bell of DeLand, sold his more than 40,000 hives to companies in
California this year and went out of business. That automatically reduces
Florida's 200,000 bee colonies by 20 percent.
A spokeswoman at Bell's office said she could not confirm that Bell had left
the business, but did say he was "semi-retired." Bell did not return phone
calls seeking comment.
The honeybee emergency has not gone unnoticed in the scientific community.
Hundreds of researchers across the globe are looking for a solution, either
through new treatments or by breeding mite-resistant bees. So far, the
search hasn't yielded much success, said Jay Evans, a geneticist with the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Bee Research Lab in Beltsville, Md.
"Beekeepers need something this year or next to keep their colonies going,"
Evans said. "For the longer-term focus, we need to understand how the mites
are so successful as parasites and breed bees that have a defense against
them."
The loss of bee hives during the past year has been so catastrophic, Evans
said, that researchers are questioning whether factors other than the varroa
mite are at work.
Officials are scrambling for money to get to the heart of the problem.
The state Agriculture Department is seeking $300,000 from the legislature
for bee research. As of Thursday, the request was heading for a conference
committee, said Carolee Howe, assistant director of agriculture policy at
the Florida Farm Bureau in Gainesville.
The American Bee Federation has asked the federal government for help. The
group wants the USDA to spend $16 million a year, twice what it now
allocates, on bee research.
Howe said the mite problem is getting worse.
"These mites are getting stronger," she said. "One day you will have a
healthy hive. The next day your hives can be dead."
Those who work in the bee industry feel that the crops that don't need bees
sometimes get more attention than they do. It's also admittedly difficult to
evoke a passion for bees in the public mind, which often views them only as
a stinging nuisance.
"We have this wonderful insect that can do marvelous things. It's not warm
and fuzzy," said Hayes, the state apiary inspection chief. "It's not like a
manatee. You can't cuddle and pet it.
"Yet without it, we have a negative impact on how our society eats. Maybe we
can help people not love the bee, but at least appreciate it more."
Aloha:
Igor
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