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Date: | Tue, 21 Jun 2022 23:47:17 -0400 |
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> Maybe Jim has a key.
More keys than Captain Kangaroo carried, but I have not yet read this paper, so I have no comments on it.
In the same issue of Apidologie, there was a second honeybee/imidacloprid paper, so that is also attached, as two papers on the same exact subject in the same issue of the same journal is a rarity.
Note the copyright notice at the top left of the first page of the Alburaki article - the journal **is** respecting the inherent "public domain" nature of the work, so anyone may freely distribute it. The 2nd paper is not overtly admitted to be in the public domain despite a US University co-author, so it is offered here solely as an exhibit to my "extensive commentary", which I have unfortunately seem to have misplaced.
(I am preoccupied elsewhere, as I am one of many people reconsidering the implications of unwieldly piles of old data, as the "Gallium Anomaly" in neutrino oscillations seems to be real rather than an experimental artifact. A paper was published earlier this year, and more data has since been produced along the same lines that eliminated many doubts. This means that either (a) we don't understand neutrinos as well as we thought we did; (b) we have real legit "sterile neutrinos", which could be some of that "dark matter" we've yet to detect, but may make up the majority of the matter in the universe; (c) we have a new force we don't understand; (d) we don't understand anything at all about several very basic aspects of physics we thought were well-understood. Or perhaps all of the above. Interesting times. This is one of these "this changes everything" moments.)
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