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Date: | Sat, 12 Sep 2009 07:47:30 +0300 |
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> Bob said:
>>>Read for yourself as the evidence against the neonicotinoids mounts.
>
A lot of new material comes, but the proof seems to be missing this far.
I was very cocerned about neonicotinoids when frensh beekeepers started to
tell about their bee losses is sunflowers 6 years ago. Neonicotinoids seemed
to be the perfect culprit. And what best the beekeepers could blame someone
else.
Then I read studies made in France. Like Marie-Piere Chauzat. Monitoring a
big number of real hives, and seeing no losses in correlation with amounts
of neonicotinoids.
If neonicotinoids are so lethal in sub lethal concentrations it would be
easy to proof. Just feed it to the hives in sugar solution and see them
collapsing. That has been done in Europe and in quess what - nothing
happened. Should be done in US too. Someone should be feeeding it also in
dry pollen supplement collected by bees from feeder outside hive. That study
I have not seen done.
If above tested and bees not collapsing, it is hard to make me believe that
subleathal amounts of neonicotinoids are a major reason to bee losses.
Beekeepers cocerned about neonicotinoids should sacrifice a few hives and
test themselves if someone else not interested.
That said neonicotinoids do kill bees when applied the wrong way. That has
been seen and proven in Europe. Two well documented cases of neonicotinoid
coated corn seeds that released so much active incredient during seeding
that bees were killed around the corn fields. But in these cases substances
could be found in hives in quite high concentrations.
Ari Seppälä
Finland
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