Similar symptoms do not necessarily
mean a similar cause.
Beekeepers at that time (70's) were
claiming losses of 40% starting in 1974,
and Idaho massive bee kills in 1976.
Researchers state:
"We concluded that Penncap M
was probably the cause."
Best Wishes,
J. Waggle
I saw the Penncap M losses - they were not what Wilson called Disappearing
Disease, not what is called CCD. With Penncap M, you get dead bees.
Wilson and colleagues did some low dose pesticide trials over winter, and
they got a Dwindle, but he and his colleagues found what you'd expect if you
fed bees pesticides.
There's a very good reason why some researchers disagreed with Bill at the
time. Someone (Randy?( should get the full story from Bill.
There's a difference btw dwindle (slow attrition) and disappear (bees
suddenly vanish).
Also, similar signs don't necessarily mean similar cause, but then again,
similar symptoms (signs) don't rule out similar cause.
Personally, I don't put much faith in the Different Causes can each
produce such a distinctive set of signs. Might be true, or may simply be because
cause hasn't been verified. If we were talking about a dwindle, I'd
agree, lots of things can set a colony off on a downward spiral. Colonies
suddenly collapsing, young bees and queen remain, often lots of brood and food,
no dead bodies to find, that's rather specific.
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