I read in a back number of the New Scientist dated 25 October 2003 that "A
separate study in the same journal [Proceedings of the Royal Society] showed
bees' learning abilities suffer if their immune systems are on high alert.
Eamonn Mallon at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, and his colleagues
injected bees with a bacterial protein that was not toxic but that did stimulate
the bees' immune systems. Then they trained these bees and untreated ones to
associate a flower scent with food.
Twelve minutes after training, 60 per cent of the untreated bees had learned
the trick compared with just 30 per cent of the treated bees. Mallon
suggests their immune systems and brains compete for the same chemicals."
Could it be that this points towards part of the explanation why bees are
having problems? Their immune systems must be alerted as never before by the
effects of varroa and all it transmits; by random environmental pollution; by
sub-lethal doses of various agricultural chemicals applied to the land, to
seeds and to growing plants; and by the substances secreted by some varieties of
GM plants that are not found in conventional ones?
Chris
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