The Case Of The Vanishing Bees
Pesticides & The Perfect Crime: In the widespread bee die-offs, bees often just vanish. One beekeeper calls it the Perfect Crime—no bodies, no murder weapon, no bees. What's happening to the bees?
On a fine June morning last year at a Target store outside Portland, Oregon, customers arrive to a startling sight: the parking lot was covered with a seething mat of bumblebees, some staggering around, most already dead, more raining down from above. The die-off lasted several days.
It didn't take long to figure out that the day before a pest-control company had sprayed a powerful insecticide on surrounding Linden trees to protect them from aphids; but nobody warned the bees to stay away. In the end, an estimated 50,000 bumblebees perished.
The tragedy at Target wiped out as many as 300 bumblebee colonies of bees no longer available to pollinate nearby trees and flowers.
The deadly pesticide is one of a fairly new family known as the neonicotinoids—“neonics” for short—developed a decade or so ago to replace organophosphates and carbamates, which are also highly toxic but dissipate far more quickly.
- Tags:
- almonds
- Bayer
- bee population declines
- Bill Rhodes
- chemicals
- Chensheng Lu
- Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD)
- corn
- Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- domesticated bees
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- Erin MacGregor-Forbes
- European Union (EU)
- Federal Insecticide Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
- food
- Greg Loarie
- herbicides
- honeybees
- Janette Brimmer
- Jeff Anderson
- neonic pesticides
- neonicotinoids
- pesticides
- pollination
- pollinators
- science
- soybeans
- sulfoxaflor
- Susan Kegley
- wild bees
- Zac Browning
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