Not if a virus or parasite is causing the die-off, which is the current speculation. Strangely enough, irradiating the hives seems to help, which is one reason scientists think it's a bug killing the bees.
2007-05-02 18:30:32
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answer #1
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answered by Alice K 7
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You're assuming the bees are dying off due to insecticides and/or environmental pollution. Not necessarily true. The bees could be dying from a naturally occuring virus, bacteria, or fungus, in which case organic practices would have little, if any, impact. Some research is suggesting that cell phone towers and the resulting microwave radiation is confusing the bees homing capabilities. Bees have very little energy reserves. If a bee cannot find it's way back to the hive, it quickly dies of starvation.
2007-05-02 19:14:21
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answer #2
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answered by Gary 1
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They don't know exactly what is causing it yet, so there's no way to say.
I'm hoping it turns out to be something singular, like insecticides containing what's called "the neonicotinoid imidacloprid."
"...an insecticide manufactured by Bayer Cropscience (part of the drug and chemical conglomerate Bayer AG). It is sold under a variety of trade names including Admire, Advantage, Gaucho, Confidor, Hachikusan, Premise, Prothor, and Winner."
It appears capable of producing the symptoms of depressed immune response and disorientation that have been observed.
Yes, once their immune response is compromised, they certainly do tend to die of lots of other things; mites, fungus, etc. But if the other things are not the underlying cause, treating them symptomatically is not the best response.
Bannning imidacloprid would be the best response, if it becomes more certainly implicated.
France has banned imidacloprid for several years already over this issue. I am interested to find out if they've seen any benefit from that.
Like I said, I am hoping the cause can be narrowed down to such a thing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder#Pesticides
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imidacloprid
2007-05-02 18:42:03
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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not while the cm corn is killing them off
monsantos gm corn has made the animals fed it sterile
now the bees , we can count on organic self replicating seeds but gm polin has contaminated them too
isnt monsanto great?
how did they manage to sabotage all that food sop fast
govt went to sleep , too much money no time to do the research
2007-05-04 01:36:32
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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what is killing them is ,mites ,disease,climate change and killer bees ,
not much to do with types of farming
2007-05-02 18:35:52
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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