Apple production will always be up, until more Foxconn employees try to jump.China tried living without bees after killing them with pesticides.
Apple production increased almost 30 percent.
Turns out bees may be free, but they are inefficient.
--Patrick
See that's the point of the article citing Stats Canada, and similar from other countries' departments of agriculture. They are pretty much as non-biased as you can EVER get. And populations are completely fine (better than ever, no exaggeration) in all the places where they were supposed to be horrific.There's definitely and 100% certainly a problem with bees at the moment.
It's the basic green mantra "if it's not organic, it must be poison" crap IMO. I started the thread with not TOO much obvious bias (bias yes, but still), but I'll say it straight out now - the facts don't support that neonic pesticides cause colony collapse disorder, as places have banned it, and places have not, and the result is the same, in that ALL have recovered in the same time period. If both kept collapsing, then we could say there's some lingering effect possible, but given that both groups have recovered (and then some) the evidence points to some unknown one-time event that caused it in the first place, but there's no reason to panic now, about bees or this particular pesticide.The problem is that's always very easy spray mist and very hard to tell facts. Is one side green fear mongering and the other scientific triumph, or is one side protecting the world while the other side's big business and blind science denying troubles? Is it global warming or tobacco smoke all over again? *shrug*, choose your poison.
See, what I THOUGHT was going to happen was that someone was going to mention how much better China was doing without Applebee's.Apple production will always be up, until more Foxconn employees try to jump.
Africanized Honey Bees are still there, and still breeding, but they're not spreading as quickly as they had been and they have effectively reached the extent of their habitat in the US.I thought this topic would be about killer bees. Anyone remember in the early 90s, we were all gonna die because of the killer bees? Then they just bred with the non-killer bees and nothing happened.
Maybe what we need is new killer bees.
...And @fade didn't like it, , and the sky is blue unless it's greyish or orangeySorry, I haven't seen it yet.
--Patrick
You son of a bitch. Take my thumbs up. Just take it and go.Honeycomb big, yeah yeah yeah. It's not small, no no no.
What? You're an adult now. If you want to go the store and buy a $6 box of Honeycomb and eat the whole thing in one sitting, you're allowed.You son of a bitch. Take my thumbs up. Just take it and go.
So that's a non-trivial reduction. Seems pretty cut-n-dry on that chemical.Exposure to thiamethoxam caused a 26% reduction in the proportion of queens that laid eggs, and advanced the timing of colony initiation, although we did not detect impacts of any experimental treatment on the ability of queens to produce adult offspring during the 14-week experimental period.
So it appears the most recent Nature study is pretty fair, though I would say while it puts the nail pretty firmly in the coffin of this particular pesticide they were testing (thiamethoxam), it does not negate the other study I found, as they are two different chemicals (the one that found no effect was for clothianidin), and in addition they don't appear to have been testing for the same result either! Same FAMILY sure, but ethanol and methanol are really close, but one will get you drunk, and the other will get you drunk and BLIND and/or dead.Reported values of the maximum concentrations of clothianidin residues found in nectar of treated crops vary from 1–12.2 ppb with the average values ranging from 0.3–4 ppb (Sanchez-Bayo & Goka, 2014; Bonmatin et al., 2015; Botías et al., 2015).