Are Honey Bees Dying?

Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Nicholas » 31 Aug 2008, 22:04

More reports all over USA are telling that bees are practically disappearing with no explication. This situation may be just another consequence of the global warming, or could this be a beginning of something that we don’t know? :?
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Andrewz » 31 Aug 2008, 22:08

something we don't know? Hardly possible.
Maybe the reason is the dirty environment that persists in the USA.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby willyoumind » 01 Sep 2008, 10:50

The same problems also have reported in other countries, especially the U.K, where the bumble bees seem to be disappeared faster than the scientists thought...
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 01 Sep 2008, 20:11

there might be a disease, specific to bees, that scientists haven't yet discovered. Tasmanians also die in mobs because of a disease (see another thread in environment)
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Nicholas » 03 Sep 2008, 20:11

Yes. But I understood that there were nobodies found in their little houses. They just disappear.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 04 Sep 2008, 21:15

they disappear? That's strange. However bees are tiny insects, and if they die in fields, the soil simply covers them and you'll never see them.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby willyoumind » 05 Sep 2008, 07:11

If I'm not wrong, I remembered that I heard that the disappearing of honey bees is related with a disease named, "Colony Collapse Disorder".

Please check on the below link to find out more about the CCD:

http://www.independent.co.uk/environmen ... 13971.html
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Steven » 06 Sep 2008, 19:37

Bees should be protected. Honey contains a lot of healing substances. I always use it in case I have a throat ache.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Nicholas » 07 Sep 2008, 09:03

But it is crucial for the human being existence? What are your thoughts about this?
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Faw_Peter » 08 Sep 2008, 18:18

crucial? No, I don't think so. We can survive without honey. It's just a product, nothing else.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Nicholas » 10 Sep 2008, 20:34

This means that bees are of no importance..
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Faw_Peter » 22 Sep 2008, 20:42

they die because of the climate. The magnetic field is changing, that can also be a reason.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Karl.in.eu » 26 Sep 2008, 20:08

Faw_Peter wrote:they die because of the climate. The magnetic field is changing, that can also be a reason.


What magnetic field? Gravitation?
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Terry » 27 Sep 2008, 16:29

magnetic field - a field of force surrounding a permanent magnet or a moving charged particle, in which another permanent magnet or moving charge experiences a force

it permanently happens in the nature.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 05 Nov 2008, 19:38

GSM waves may kill them little by little. Bees are small insects, but their organism is very smart. I read an article that the GSM waves killed inside them the mechanism of orientation. This is an obvious reason for their massive dying.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby John » 09 Dec 2008, 00:24

Steven wrote:Bees should be protected. Honey contains a lot of healing substances. I always use it in case I have a throat ache.

I actually heard the opposite. Honey is not recommended when you have a sour throat.

And the bees from what I heard in the news are dieing because of a parasite brought from Asia.
In order to kill the parasite the bees a sprayed with some medicines or chemicals that makes the honey poisonous for humans. So it is recommended to avoid honey for some time or buy only from sources that you trust.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 03 Feb 2009, 21:56

What's the point of bees' existence then, if their honey can't be consumed why should people grow bees then? I know it's not an easy work and requires patience.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Faw_Peter » 21 Feb 2009, 16:57

You can use honey for treating digestive problems, gastroenteritis and stomach ulcers. Doctors widely recommend it for their patients. In ancient times, Egyptians used to heal wounds with honey.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Terry » 26 Feb 2009, 20:27

Bee honey causes emollient effect on your skin, by disposing it of dryness and peeling. It gives a vitality to your skin. Cosmetologists know that.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 04 Mar 2009, 23:37

The honey is recommended for treating different infectious diseases. As against antibiotics, bacteria can't beat honey's healing features, while antibiotics are vulnerable.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Riser » 01 Apr 2009, 21:14

Darker honeys have more nutrients than light ones. honey has osmotic properties; that is, it tends to withdraw water. Water molecules strongly react with the sugars in honey, leaving little water available for microorganisms. Thus, infection-causing bacteria is literally dehydrated to death by honey.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby M.Helen » 06 Apr 2009, 20:22

Lasting (one-two months) of honey (50-140 grams per day) consumed by people who suffer from heart disease problems leads to better health condition, normalizes blood structure, raises hemoglobin.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Benn » 10 Apr 2009, 00:55

honey in the mix with cinnamon cures plenty of diseases. As against antibiotics, it doesn't give side effects. Those who have problems with gases, due to honey the stomach is relieved of gas.
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby Benn » 22 Apr 2009, 00:00

Honey is much better than any energy drink, even red bull. If you are feeling lethargic in the morning, instead of drinking another can of carbonated energy drink , try honey in order to walk freely another extra mile
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Re: Are Honey bees dying?

Postby tricker » 30 Jun 2009, 13:12

THE world's honeybees appear to be dying off in horrifying numbers, and now consensus is starting to emerge on the reason why: it seems there is no one cause. Infections, lack of food, pesticides and breeding - none catastrophic on their own - are having a synergistic effect, pushing bee survival to a lethal tipping point. A somewhat anti-climactic conclusion it may be, but appreciating this complexity - and realising there will be no magic bullet - may be the key to saving the insects.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... ronts.html
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