In case you Mead makers did not get to read this:
Cheers!
~Brian
After the alarm, just a healthy buzz
BY TOM WEBB
Pioneer Press
TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press
Article Last Updated:10/02/2007 11:47:52 PM CDT
When last we heard from honeybees, the buzz was bad.
A new ailment had emerged over the winter, causing bee colonies to
mysteriously flee, and fueling scary stories about the vanishing
honeybee - and the threat to crops that depend on bees for pollination.
But Minnesota's honeybees are still here. In fact, most honeybees
thrived this summer, state beekeepers report. Minnesota's crops were
richly pollinated. Apples, berries and pumpkins are abundant. There's
even plenty of honey here in America's No. 5 honey-producing state.
To be sure, Colony Collapse Disorder remains a real worry. But for now,
state bee experts can't identify a confirmed case of it here this
summer.
"A lot of beekeepers lose colonies, but it could be a lot of things ...
but the Colony Collapse specifically, I have not heard at all, no," said
Katie Klett, a University of Minnesota bee specialist. "Drought was the
biggest problem I heard about this year."
Dan Pasche is the state apiary inspector for the Minnesota Department of
Agriculture. If the syndrome were spreading through Minnesota this
summer, he'd probably have seen it.
"I'm not aware of any this summer," he said. "There was at least one
beekeeper who talked about some losses last year in his bees ... but
they appear to have recovered pretty well over the summer."
Beekeeping is usually the quietest of ventures, and most Minnesotans
probably don't realize the state ranks among the bee queens. Here are
backyard hobbyists, huge commercial honeybee operations that truck bees
nationwide, and everything in between. Despite the drought, many report
good years.
"I got 80 pounds of honey this year, which is as much as I've ever
gotten in the past," said Kris Miller, a Washington County beekeeper.
Among her colleagues, "a lot of people actually had a pretty good honey
harvest," she said.
David Ellingson, an Ortonville beekeeper and past president of the
Minnesota Honey Producers, told Congress this spring about losing 65
percent of his bees while wintering in Texas. Now back in Minnesota,
he's still having problems among his 3,400 hives.
"We did see probably 20 percent of our colonies go from excellent to
poor, at the end of June and into July," Ellingson said. "Some of them
have rebounded, and others have gone away."
Losing bee colonies is one of the gloomy facts of life for beekeepers,
and over the years, bee losses have been worsening. Bee mites, viruses
and pesticides have taken a toll.
"Twenty-five years ago, if you lost 5 to 7 percent of your bees (during
the winter), that would be normal," Ellingson said. "But today, we look
at normal as being 20 percent."
But what alarmed folks last winter were reports of spotty but enormous
losses, in a pattern not seen before: eggs were laid, the queen bees
remained, but the thousands of adult bees had simply vanished. Dubbed
Colony Collapse Disorder, it surfaced most often in the South and on the
coasts.
Nobody knew the cause, but lots of theories were floated. The catchiest:
Cell phones were somehow to blame.
"We know it's not cell phones," said Klett, who added that, "in the
scientific community, that was never a possibility." But it did grab
lots of media attention.
Honeybees play a crucial role in the U.S. food system, pollinating crops
from alfalfa to zucchini. Based on U.S. Department of Agriculture data,
there's no evidence of a falloff in crop production in Minnesota this
summer. The crop of apples, which depends on honeybees, actually
increased this year.
Since last spring, scientists have identified an imported virus that
appears linked to collapsed colonies. They're also examining a long list
of other suspects, including a class of insecticides and an array of bee
diseases. Beekeeping practices are coming under scrutiny, too.
"We've got a 50-piece puzzle here, and we've only got 10 pieces that we
know are going on," Ellingson said. "There's too many unknowns."
Klett, whose family runs a North Dakota farm breeding queen bees, said
it suffered big losses in 2006. Yet 2007 was "the best year we've ever
had," she said, with production "through the roof."
So it's a riddle and a concern. Winter will test the state's honeybees
again. But thus far, they're hanging tough.
"What's great is that I'm getting a lot of questions from the general
public that I'd never gotten before," said Miller, the Washington County
beekeeper who also is president of the Minnesota Hobby Beekeepers
Association. "It's nice to see people concerned about a bee - whereas
before, they'd just kill it. So I like that part."
---
Brian Hatcher
Sr. Master Scheduler
C.P.I.M.
Email: brian_hatcher(a)Xiotech.com
Office: 952 983 2466
Fax: 952 983 2488
Xiotech Corporation
6455 Flying Cloud Drive
Eden Prairie, MN 55344
www.xiotech.com :
www.xiotech.com/demo : Toll-Free 866 472 6764