Fish Eaters Traditional Catholic Forum
May 25, 2013, 01:12:AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News: The man still needs help!
 
   Fish Eaters    Forum Index   Forum Rules   Help Calendar Members Chat Room   Who's Chatting   Login Register  
Pages: [1] 2
 
Author Topic: Scientists blame bee-colony collapse on cell phones  (Read 1375 times)
devotedknuckles
the causes go, true rebels remain
Member

Personality type: incorrigible buffalo
Posts: 20,680



« on: June 03, 2010, 05:55:PM »

yeah thats right

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ytech_wguy/20100603/tc_ytech_wguy/ytech_wguy_tc2385

Scientists blame bee-colony collapse on cell phones

By Christopher Null


As bee colonies continue their worldwide collapse (except, apparently, in the area surrounding my house, which is a paradise for bees — and their droppings), scientists say they think they have a line on what’s going on.

The reason: cell phones.

According to the Telegraph, researchers at India's Panjab University say they have linked “colony collapse disorder” to cell-phone radiation. Their experiments involved placing mobile handsets on a beehive, powering the phone on for two 15-minute sessions each day over a period of three months. A control hive had dummy phones installed.

The results were astonishing. After the three months, the hive with the active phones saw the queen reducing the number of eggs she laid “significantly” — cutting the number laid by more than half — and the bees stopped producing honey. Worker bees regularly stopped returning to the hive as well.

What’s going on? The scientists behind the study call it environmental “electropollution,” suggesting that the magnetite in honeybees’ bodies is impacted by the electromagnetic fields that the gadgets create, causing bees to behave erratically or get lost.

On the other hand, these results are not necessarily the case everywhere. The British Beekeepers Association says that in London there are successful hives despite high mobile-phone use in the area. The group’s opinion is that a combination of factors, including disease and pesticides, are likely at play.

Nonetheless, the bees are dying out. In England, half of the country’s hives have disappeared in the last 20 years, though the rate of loss appears to be slowing.
Logged

This is the journey
from which, for me there shall be no return
wholly drenched
is the pine tree of  tears
-Yoshida Shoin
QuisUtDeus
Guest
« Reply #1 on: June 03, 2010, 06:03:PM »

I remember this was a theory when the colonies were first collapsing, but I thought it ended up being disproven....   Huh?
Logged
Slayer
Member

Gender: Male
Posts: 247


« Reply #2 on: June 03, 2010, 06:54:PM »

I think it is the chemtrails.
Logged
devotedknuckles
the causes go, true rebels remain
Member

Personality type: incorrigible buffalo
Posts: 20,680



« Reply #3 on: June 03, 2010, 07:36:PM »

from planes or after some wicked chili?
sip sip
Logged

This is the journey
from which, for me there shall be no return
wholly drenched
is the pine tree of  tears
-Yoshida Shoin
WhollyRoaminCatholic
Excelsior!
Red Fish
*
Gender: Male
Posts: 9,602

Fisheaters is a strange place.


« Reply #4 on: June 03, 2010, 07:40:PM »

I blame monoculture farming and suburban yards where everyone wants to look like they live in Des Moines.
Logged

Nobody ever really leaves Fisheaters.


Rosarium
Guest
« Reply #5 on: June 03, 2010, 08:01:PM »

They should make it a new law forbidding cell phone use while gathering nectar.

The bees doing the gather are female I think, so it figures they are on the phone all the time.
Logged
EcceQuamBonum
Member

Gender: Male
Location: Charlottesville, VA
Posts: 898



« Reply #6 on: June 03, 2010, 09:33:PM »

Nonsense.  It's global warming.

It's only a small step from the polar bears to the honeybees.
Logged

More an antique Roman than an Anglican.

"Sero Te amavi, Pulchritudo tam antiqua et tam nova.  Sero Te amavi!"-Confessions, X.27

"The Christians of Carthage have an excellent name for the sacraments, when they say that baptism is nothing else than 'Salvation,' and the sacrament of the Body of Christ nothing else than 'Life.'"
--St. Augustine, De peccatorum meritis et remissione, et de baptismo parvulorum ad Marcellinum, I.34
Louis_Martin
High Overlord
Member

Gender: Male
Location: New Hampshire
Personality type: Choleric/Phlegmatic. "Fieldmarshal" ENTJ
Posts: 2,105


Chances are I'm not being serious.


« Reply #7 on: June 03, 2010, 09:52:PM »

It's wet conditions,  varroa mites, and the stress of moving the hives.  Being a beekeeper, I'm fairly certain about this.  All the beekeepers that are having this problem are the ones with huge operations that ship their hives to the south for the growing season during winter.  It's no new age crap.  It's just too much for the bees.  Small operations aren't having the problem, and the ones that shell out a little more to medicate their syrup and protect the hives against shock are doing better as well.
Logged

Strive, not for what is acceptable, but for what is greatest.

I don't pretend to know everything, but I don't pretend to not know what I know I know, so I know what I know and I like people who agree with what I know I know, and I'm indifferent to differences of opinion on what I know I don't know.
Texican
Если не я, то кто?
Member

Gender: Male
Location: here. there. everywhere!
Personality type: studený
Posts: 9,505


Déu, força, i honor


« Reply #8 on: June 03, 2010, 10:00:PM »

They should make it a new law forbidding cell phone use while gathering nectar.

The bees doing the gather are female I think, so it figures they are on the phone all the time.

Bluetooth headseats?
Logged

i.p.i.
Guest
« Reply #9 on: June 26, 2010, 10:24:PM »

It's wet conditions,  varroa mites, and the stress of moving the hives.  Being a beekeeper, I'm fairly certain about this.  All the beekeepers that are having this problem are the ones with huge operations that ship their hives to the south for the growing season during winter.  It's no new age crap.  It's just too much for the bees.  Small operations aren't having the problem, and the ones that shell out a little more to medicate their syrup and protect the hives against shock are doing better as well.

that's reassuring.  my dad kept bees but i don't know anyone who does now.  agribusiness is just not a good thing.  small scale operations don't have the problems the big ones do and they turn out better quality food. 

i had no idea they shipped hives south for winter but that can't be good for the bees.  what can beekeepers do about wet weather, though?




Logged
Pages: [1] 2
 
 
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.8 | SMF © 2006-2008, Simple Machines LLC