Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Countering the Hype

   This is the letter-to-the-editor I wrote and submitted today, on behalf of my boss:

Dear Editors,

   Recent news reports have hyped up some mild hysteria regarding Honeybee Colony collapse Disorder (CCD) by mentioning that “some U.S. hives” have lost “as much as ninety percent of their bees last winter” (“Mystery bee disease may destroy hives worldwide,” OC Register 06/25/07). While this may be true, “some U.S. hives” have also lost 90 percent of their bees due to bears, skunks, or freak accidents.
   A recent congressional report (“Recent Honey Bee Colony Declines,” Congressional Research Service, 06/20/07) puts more reliable numbers to the problem.
   Compared to an average normal loss of 16% of colonies over winter, beekeepers on average lost 38% last winter. While this increase is alarming, it is by no means the mass extinction that the citation of extreme cases has lead the public to believe.

   The OC Register has encouraged people who find themselves hosting unwelcome feral bee swarms or colonies to have them removed live by Orange County Beekeepers Association volunteers, in order to mitigate this perceived bee decimation (“The Secret Lives of Beekeepers,” 05/19/07; “More Buzz on Bees” 07/21/07). This advice is problematic for several reasons.
   Firstly, it is far more cost effective for a commercial beekeeper to recoup their bee stocks by breeding from their existing colonies or commercial
scale bee breeders than it is for random feral colonies to be shipped and integrated.
   Secondly, feral colonies are unhygienic. Honeybees suffer from a variety of ailments which can be controlled in clean commercial hives but run rampant in feral colonies: varroa and tracheal mites are serious causes of bee mortality, for example [And certainly DO cause the "loss of 90%" of the bees in "some US hives!"]. And in fact, as the causes of CCD are currently not known, and may very well be some form of communicable pathogen, beekeepers are more reluctant than ever to introduce bees of dubious hygiene into their apiaries.
   Thirdly, on a related note, Africanized Honeybees are known to have colonized Orange County. Commercial beekeepers do not want Africanized Honeybees, and it requires extensive DNA testing to determine if a colony or swarm is Africanized or not.
   In conclusion, commercial beekeepers do not want Orange County’s feral bees.

   The May 19th OC Register article also noted that the OC Beekeepers Association volunteers will "tame" Africanized colonies by introducing a European queen. What actually occurs is that the European queen produces European offspring who gradually replace the Africanized bees when they die at the end of their 40
day lifespan [Actually what ACTUALLY happens frequently is the African bees create an African queen, kill the European queen, and go about their African business]. In short, one is not actually saving a colony, but merely replacing it. The existing bees will die in 40 days regardless, and the new queen could just as easily be used to regenerate a commercial hive rather than replacing a colony no one will want.
   The OC Register’s continuing encouragement of live removals is misleading and unwarranted. Overhype of CCD by reporting extreme cases as if they are the norm actually does the Register’s readers a disservice and leaves them less informed than they started.

Sincerely,
David Marder
Former president,
Orange County Beekeepers Association



   Additionally, I wrote the followed press release:

CONTACT: Dave Marder – (949) 497-6264
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

RESCUE OF FERAL COLONIES NOT THE ANSWER TO COLONY
COLLAPSE DISORDER


   Recent news reports have hyped up some hysteria regarding Honeybee Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) by mentioning that “some U.S. hives” have lost “as much as ninety percent of their bees” (“Mystery bee disease
may destroy hives worldwide,” OC Register 06/25/07). The OC Register has recently been encouraging people to have feral swarms and colonies removed from their property live to mitigate this problem. David Marder, of Bee Busters Incorporated, a Laguna Hills based company specializing in bee control, disagrees.
   David Marder has been involved in beekeeping and bee control for over 25 years. He was on the Governor’s Steering Committee on Africanized Honeybees and is certified by Dr Steven Theones as an Africanized Honeybee expert. Marder was the president of the Orange County Beekeepers Association for two years, has been featured on CNN, Discovery Channel, National Geographic, and Wallstreet Journal, and has guest spoken at countless venues. Marder is licensed by the state of California to perform structural pest control.
Picture not actually included in press release   “Live removal of feral swarms and colonies from Orange County poses a serious risk to public health and domestic animals,” says Marder. Feral bees in Orange County are likely to be Africanized, and only DNA testing on a given specimen can tell for certain. Africanized bees are not always readily identifiable by their behaviour, and hosting them in close proximity to dense human habitation is an accident waiting to happen. Shipping them elsewhere may actually exacerbate the spread of Africanized honeybees.
   Additionally, as the causes of CCD is currently unknown and may well be caused by a communicable bee pathogen, mixing clean domestic bees with unhygienic feral bees is likely to make the situation worse.
   “I used to do live removals,” says Marder, “but when Africanized Honeybees were discovered in Orange County, Dr Eric Mussen (notable bee researcher at UC Davis) said to me during a ride-along, ‘there are two things I don’t want you doing, one is keeping feral bees, and two is giving those bees to beekeepers.’”
   Recently, a swarm rescued by Orange County Beekeepers Association members and given to a hobbyist beekeeper has resulted in the death of a pet dog.
   Additionally, the volunteers who perform live removals often lack the technical or legal qualifications to perform the work. Bee Busters technicians have had a number of calls to clean up removal attempts that had been botched by volunteers. Many, if not all, the volunteers also do not meet the State Pest Control Act requirement that anyone performing live removals have $25,000 of insurance posted to cover the potential liabilities (§ 8555g).
   “You should never allow someone to work with bees on your property who is not properly licensed and insured” urges Marder, “its just too much of a liability.”

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   So there you have it. You may think "of COURSE you as a pest control company are biased against saving the bees" -- BUT keep in mind we DID do live removals but stopped for the exact reasons outlined above: no one wanted them and experts told us it was unsafe. Suprisingly, if we ever did have another bumblebee call (which I'm not sure we've gotten in literally years), we WOULD try to save the bumblebees, because they ARE nearly extinct in this area -- but you don't hear about that because no one cares about bumblebees.

   Next post I believe I will write about the actual Colony Collapse Disorder

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