July 17, 2007 / New York TIMES
Bees Dying: Is It a Crisis or a Phase?
By ANDREW C. REVKIN

Over the last year, large die-offs of commercial honeybee colonies,
from unknown causes, have raised concern that an agricultural crisis
is at hand. Now, however, some experts on insect biology and bee
rearing are questioning how unusual the die-offs are, saying
commercial beekeeping has long had a pattern of die-offs, and without
better monitoring, there is not enough information to know if anything
new or calamitous is happening.

If the problem is worse than before, they say, it may be because more
bee colonies are being housed and trucked by fewer beekeepers, raising
the chances of infestations or infections spreading.

The official word, endorsed by many scientists and people in
beekeeping businesses, is that a newly named syndrome, called colony
collapse disorder,or CCD, is at work and poses a significant threat to
American fruit, nut and vegetable crops.

An action plan released Friday by the Department of Agriculture used
the phrase "CCD crisis" to describe the recent die-offs, even as it
said it was "uncertain whether CCD is a new phenomenon" and described
similar die-offs as long ago as 1898.

No one in the field doubts that commercial beekeepers in more than 20
states have seen large declines in hive populations in the last year —
more than 70 percent in some cases — and that agriculture is facing
problems pollinating some crops.

It is also clear that bees in the Americas, both wild native species
and honeybees, which were imported long ago and are the commercial
standard, have been hard hit in recent decades by mites and infectious
agents.

What some scientists say is missing from the debate is historical
context. "Every time there are these disappearances, the ills of the
moment tend to be held accountable," said May Berenbaum, who heads the
entomology department at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
and led a National Academy of Sciences review of the status of North
American bees and other pollinators that was published last year.

"In the '60s it was synthetic organic insecticides," Dr. Berenbaum
said. "In the '70s it was Africanized bee genes. In the 19th century,
there is a wonderful report about this resulting from a lack of moral
fiber. Weak character was why they weren't returning to the hives."

One thing almost everyone seems to agree on is the need for
consistent, frequent censuses of the country's bee populations, but
money for monitoring has not been increased, bee experts said.

Eric Mussen, a bee expert at the University of California, Davis, said
he did not understand the talk of catastrophe, noting that even after
colonies are lost, beekeepers can quickly replace them.

Michael Burgett, a professor emeritus of entomology at Oregon State
University, said the big honeybee losses in some regions could simply
reflect unremarkable spikes above a common level of mortality of more
than 20 percent in recent decades.

"In the late 1970s we had another scare similar to this," Dr. Burgett
said. "They called it 'disappearing disease' at the time. But we never
found a specific cause for it, we continued to improve our bee
management programs and 'disappearing disease' disappeared."

--
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) --  Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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