Peter
I'm not sure how you would classify my credentials. I, for one, have said
many times that CCD may be an old problem, never resolved, simply cycling. As
mentioned before, reports of disappearing disease go back to the 1890s.
Widespread and severe DD was documented in LA, TX and other states in the early
60s. Bill Wilson's 1979 paper indicates that something virtually identical
to what we are now seeing happened in 1975, was reported in 27 states.
Interesting side note - for each outbreak, whether small or large, the
probable cause changed with the decade. In the early 60s it was thought to be
nutrition. Then it was pesticides (low level, chronic exposures), then it
became a genetic problem. Now its mites/pathogens/new
pesticides/nutrition/unknown - depending on the beekeeper or researcher.
As per pesticide residues -- the questions you ask are always a problem
working after the fact. One has to work with what one has. A beekeeper who
sustains a massive bee kill from a pesticide application has only bodies and hive
components to sample - often collected far too many hours, days, weeks after
the exposure event. Its part of the reason why litigating pesticide issues
in court is so time consuming and expensive. Neither side has perfect data
-- not even close to what a scientist would like to have. Best one can do is
chain of evidence and appropriate sampling protocols. I worked with both
NIST (aka Nat Bureau of Standards) on banking honey bee reference materials in
the 1980s, and with NBS and EPA's pesticide lab on sampling and analytical
sample preparation issues in the 70s (before the EPA lab closed its doors).
Unfortunately, much of what we learned seems to have been forgotten.
A word of caution about about web postings on CCD. Members of the CCD
Working Group have published some joint statements - such as describing the
symptoms of CCD. These have been reviewed and approved by all.
However, we are all individuals and have our own perspectives on the issues,
research needs, interpretation of data. Individual projects, studies,
reports generally express the views of the authors and may, may not reflect the
views of other investigators.
Jerry
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