Michael Heile Nelson 3 English 11 Honors April 29 2016 Honeybee Population Crisis Bees are very crucial to our society. They pollinate over $14 billion worth of crops each year (Ballaro and Warhol). With that amount of money you could buy almost 15 new Viking stadiums each year. They are so valuable to our society and if the bee population goes down, the human population will soon follow. Although many people are unaware of the shrinking bee population, scientific evidence has proven it to be a major problem.…
I feel that John intentionally and unlawfully poisoned my bees which then resulted in a decrease in the yield of my…
Habitat loss is another problem along with global warming. Global warming allows plants to flower earlier that the bees…
One of the most important organisms in this biome is a little pollinator with yellow and black stripes: the bee. Lately, bees have been facing a population decline, and sadly people just do not seem to care. People need to help restore the bees because bees are a very important part of everyday life, especially in the flourishing of flowers, being replenished by wildfires, and their direct correlation to the human species. Most bees are not actually tree dwellers; some actually prefer to burrow in warm soil. Besides being warm, the best soil must be rich in minerals and have plenty of available space.…
Tragedy of the Commons: Bees and Neonics Pause for a second to envision the environment without bees. It would be a lot less pleasant than the one you currently know. For starters, you would likely starve. Bees provide the majority of pollination assistance that nurtures agriculture. However, the bee population is diminishing due to multiple factors, yet the primary factor is a class of insecticide chemicals acknowledged as neonicotinoids or neonics.…
In the lecture it is stated that bees could have exists as early as 200 million years ago. The lecture refutes the claims made in the passage. basically three points are discussed in the article and in the lecture, the professor addresses all three issues with specific points. Firstly, the passage states that in the 200-million year-old fossilized trees found in the state of Arizona in the southwestern United States did not contain any fossils of actual bees.…
Given these points, the issue of the declining population of bees becomes more apparent and demand attention. This affects the human population as a whole. The disappearance of even a single type of bee-pollinated plant species could potentially collapse entire food chains, killing insects, birds, and the mammals who depend on them. Biodiversity is the cornerstone of our nutrition, our medicines, and our ability to fight off viruses, parasites, and pathogens. Without biodiverse ecosystems, human health would be seriously compromised.…
The main objective of the laboratory was to identity different species of honeybees based on their physical and genetic attributes. Due to the invasion of African honeybees in North America, hybridization has increased between African and European honeybees. The hypothesis is that the four unknown bees are hybridized with a European mother and an African father. The wing-lengths of European, African, and unknown bees were measured, and the mtDNA of eight different bees were subjected to gel electrophoresis. The results showed that African bees were small with one band of mtDNA, European bees were large with two bands of mtDNA, and the unknown bees were of various sizes with two bands of mtDNA.…
Introduction Colony collapse disorder (CCD) is causing a decline in honeybee population in the United States that in turn affects the nation’s economy and ecology. This paper will examine what CCD is, what the possible causes of CCD are, its impact on the nation’s economy and ecology, different treatment options, how this impacts the local area around the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and what the future might hold for bees in the United States. Colony collapse disorder is a disease that causes worker bees to inexplicably not return to the hive resulting in abandonment and eventual death of the hive (PR Newswire, 2012). In fact, when this disease takes hold of a honeybee hive, there is a distinct lack of bees in and around the hive, dead or alive (Fries, 2014). So far, no single marker has been found that causes CDD, although there has been speculation from climate change and pesticides to parasites (Watanabe, 2009).…
Do it For The Honey: Causes For The Honeybee Population Collapse Einstein once said, “If bees were to disappear from the globe, mankind would only have four years left to live.” The world’s honeybee populations are in dreadful need of help. Scientists have found that thousands of honeybee colonies have been disappearing. They’re dying from CCD, also known as colony collapse disorder.…
Prelude Maintenance of robust wildlife communities is valued by many Americans as a central aspect of national pride and cultural heritage. What is less recognized is the role healthy ecosystems play in the health and sustenance of human populations. When wildlife or a piece of a wildlife system directly benefits human well-being it is referred to as an ecosystem service. Decline in bee populations worldwide is putting humankind at risk of damaging it’s most imperative ecosystem service: animal pollination of food crops. This essay will address the potential link between loss of bee colonies and use of neonicotinoid pesticides.…
By the time the spores reach the hemocoel, the bee has begun to be reduced to a brown glue-like state and subsequently will dry up to become a hard, scale-covered remains (De Smet et…
People should be concerned about the problem that zombees are. To start off, The author describes how, “A couple of weeks later, he discovered that the bees had died and that the container was filled with tiny brown pupae.”. Tons of bees are painfully dying from this phenomenon. Equally important, “As a result, the bee begins to show signs of strange, zombie-like behavior. For example, “zombees leave their hives at night, which is something that healthy bees never do.”.…
After observing the hives, they saw that the small hives “swarmed”(Smith, Carter and Seeley) more often than the large hives. They also observed that the large hives had deniably more bees than the small hives. After a few months they noticed the “first sign of disease in some of the larger hives”(Smith, Carter and Seeley). Within a month the disease went rampant throughout the hive, killing the queen bee. This caused the colony to “collapse”(Smith, Carter and Seeley) and most of the bees to die-off.…
States dependent on crops pollinated by honey bees will face economic downturn. Consumers will find themselves lacking essential nutrients as certain crops become scarce and highly expensive. Further research into solutions to slow the rate of decline within the honey bee population is necessary to determine final economic state of affairs. Possible solutions, such as research to determine an insecticide that can deter the Varroa mite without affecting honey bees or organic growing without pesticides to maintain health of honey bees. Recent movements to educate the public on amatuer beekeeping can help boost the population of honey bees.…