Burt's Bees Aims to Improve Bee Health

Corporate Love in the Time of Colony Collapse Disorder

Burt's Bees and the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign are 
looking for a few good scientists to help improve the ailing health 
of the honeybee.

Burt's Bees, the maker of "earth-friendly natural" personal care 
products, is contributing $32,000, and the North American Pollinator 
Protection Campaign's Honeybee Health Improvement Task Force will 
leverage its scientific expertise in choosing the 2-4 projects most 
worthy of a cash infusion. The money will benefit research that 
focuses on one of four things: the effect of climate on nectar or 
pollen quality and other environmental variables, the effects of 
nutrition on bee or colony health, the health effects of pesticides, 
or ways to improve the genetic stock of honeybees.

The goal is to define real-world techniques that will improve 
honeybee health at a time when an unknown agent (or some combination 
of known agents) is causing unprecedented death in a phenomenon 
called colony collapse disorder. Even before colony collapse disorder 
reared its ugly head (scattering bees from their hives, to which they 
never returned), honeybees had experienced years of decline as a 
result of a series of viruses, parasites and other problems.

If you're a scientist with a great idea, go to 
<http://www.thedailygreen.com/print-this/environmental-news/latest/burts-bees-47121502>Pollinator.org
 
for more information.

If you're just concerned about bees, take heart that maybe some 
sorely needed help is on the way.

Find this article at: 
<http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/burts-bees-47121502>http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/burts-bees-47121502

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