VERY good "take" on the article from someone who, obviously, has hands on experience. Just what I was hoping for. THANKSJimWWhite said:In the past few years, researchers have pointed to numerous potential causes of CCD, and many of those have been disproved or reconsidered. Is CCD a particularly difficult case to solve? If so, why?
It is difficult to solve because it doesnt leave bodies for autopsy the bees of most interest disappear. The movement of more than a million colonies of bees across the nation and back and forth through agricultural lands makes tracking almost impossible.
OK, someone's going to get me on a rant here if they keep it up. The above was taken from the Mother Earth News article previously mentioned. One thing that strikes me is that the person writing this article appears to be one of those 'The Sky's Falling, The End of the World is Coming' reporters who doesn't want the truth but wants to stir people up and get them foaming at the mouth over their pet cause of the moment. Look, if you go out to your hive and it's empty and there's a pile of dead bees beneath it or on your bottom board screen, then there is a problem. A real problem. Something killed the bees very quickly. This would have to be a pesticide or a microbe. But if there's no bee bodies and no evidence of mites, foul brood, varroa, etc. then the hive probably just gave up and moved on or just diminished out of existence. It only takes a few weeks for that to happen to a weak colony. I'll bet most amatuer beekeepers probably don't open up their hives and go all the way down every couple of months or so just to see whats going on inside. Do they check on the queen? Is she even there? Are there queen cells at the bottom of the hive body's centermost frames? Are there a lot of drone cells? These are things that an experienced beekeeper looks for and will do something about. I'm not saying that CCD doesn't happen because it does. Does it happen to the average beekeeping operation either commercial or hobbiest? Perhaps. But I'm betting that what a lot of amateur beekeepers are reporting as CCD is just that the hive petered out because it just got weak and wasn't properly cared for. Did you know that certain times of the year you need to feed bees because of a dry spell, too cold, etc. I still believe the biggest problem with CCD is with the big commercial operations that put 200+ hives on flatbed 18-wheelers and haul them all over the country which puts a tremendous stress on the bees. Stress, changing diets, pesticides, diesel fumes, not being properly cared for... these are all triggers for CCD in my opinion and in the opinion of most of the beekeepers in our local association. So instead of crying and wringing your hands about the pending doom of civilization, why not just go out and tend to your hives like you're supposed to. And if you don't have a hive join your local beekeeping association and learn how to and then set up your own hive. You'll find there's a lot of people out there who are more than willing to help you get started. And you'll find out about an extremely interesting hobby and help our world at the same time.