Saving Honey Bees

[section title=”Page Section” bgcolor=”” fullbleed=”0″ csshook=””][row layout=”single” bgcolor=”” textcolor=”” padding=”pad-top” gutter=”gutter” csshook=””][column csshook=”” bgcolor=”” verticalbleed=”0″][textblock ]June 11, 2013 | On Solid Ground, CAHNRS | by Bob Hoffman

Honey bees face a lot of challenges, according to Steve Sheppard, professor of entomology at WSU. Invasive mites can sap a brood’s strength and vector viruses. Pesticides can build up in the brood comb and gradually weaken the bees. And while the agricultural practice of monoculture provides a lot of food, it offers little of the nutritional variety that bees need. Some of these threats may weaken or kill a hive on their own, but a combination of factors is thought to be the cause of colony collapse disorder, in which the worker bees abruptly disappear, and the entire local population is doomed.

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