The Mind of James Donahue Mite Attack |
|||||
Home | Aaron's Magick | Political Art | Genesis Revised | About Aaron | About James Donahue | Many Things | Shoes | Ships | Sealing Wax | Cabbages | Kings | Sea Is Boiling | Pigs With Wings | Lucifer | Goetia Spirits | Hot Links | Page 2 | Main Page
|
|||||
The World’s Honeybees
Are Dying By James Donahue April, 2005 It may seem insignificant
to the millions of folks living in urban areas where they rarely see a bee unless they grow flowers. But honeybees around
the world are dying and the impact could mean a major reduction in the world food supply. The culprit is a tiny
critter called the Varroa blood sucking bee mite that attacks the bees before they hatch. This mite first threatened
honeybees in the Anything stronger will
kill the bees. This new breed of mite
is attacking bees all over the world and beekeepers are racing to find a solution to this new dilemma. “By late spring,
we could see an awful lot of bees die,” warned Laurence Cutts, a bee inspector with the Florida Division of Plant Industry.
“We’re in considerable trouble.” In the Dalby, who serves as
chairman of the British Beekeepers Association’s technical committee, said the mite is tightening its grip on the British
honey bee industry by wiping out hive populations across the country. The loss of the bees
will first be noticed in the honey industry, where prices will skyrocket as supplies dwindle. By Dalby said there will
long range effects that will be extremely damaging to the environment. “Honey bees will
decline, birds which eat seeds will starve and the whole face of the countryside will change,” he said. While there are many
other types of bees, wasps and even birds that carry pollen from flower to flower, none of them do this job as effectively
in fruit orchards, vegetable farms and clover fields as the honeybee. While most grasses are
wind pollinated, many plants and fruit trees need insects, and mainly bees, to transfer the male pollen to female ovaries.
The loss of the honey bees can have a direct effect on squash, melons, cucumbers, cabbage, broccoli, turnip, kale, radish,
mustard, brussels sprouts, tomatos, peppers, potatos, eggplants and nearly all of the fruits produced on the ground and in
trees. One specialist, David
Yarrow, recently suggested that the mite, like HIV and AIDS, are an “opportunistic infection” and are a symptom
rather than a cause of the bee kill. A symptom of what you
may ask? Of an overpopulated, polluted, heating and dying planet. |
||||
|
||||