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Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta uk. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta uk. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, enero 15, 2012

Don't kill the messenger


Dear BeeAlert subscriber,

News just in provides compelling evidence that Bayer's neonicotinoid pesticides are a significant cause of bee deaths in Britain and elsewhere, supporting the case that we have been making for years.

The British Bee Keepers Association must now climb down from the fence and clearly state their opposition to the use of these deadly chemicals on agricultural land, or face even more derision and condemnation from beekeepers and other associations both in the UK and abroad.

A key study, published in a respected scientific journal, demonstrates that neonicotinoids are routinely found in lethal doses in samples of dead bees, in seed planter exhaust, in fields where seeds had been planted and in dandelion flowers growing nearby. This shows clear pathways by which bees are being poisoned and removes any last shred of an excuse for the BBKA to continue to toe the pesticide industry line that these substances are 'safe if used correctly'.

If you keep bees within flying distance of agricultural land where maize, oilseed-rape (Canola) or other crops are grown using clothianidin-coated seed, YOUR BEES ARE IN DANGER. Likewise, all other pollinating insects - including endangered bumblebees - that live on or near that land will be poisoned, as will the birds and reptiles that feed on them. There is also growing evidence of possible long-term effects on human health.


SUGGESTED ACTION

Read the paper here - http://tinyurl.com/776y97v

PLEASE write to the BBKA and ask them to put their weight behind efforts to ban these deadly toxins from our countryside, while we still have some bees left.

Send an email to bbka@britishbeekeepers.com asking the BBKA to STOP supporting the pesticide industry and to work to have neonicotinoids banned in the UK. (More BBKA email addresses below)

If you are a BBKA member, pass this email around your local association - the more people who understand what is going on, the better. Make sure this issue is discussed and a resolution is passed to BBKA HQ.

If you are a gardener, look out for neonicotinoids in household sprays and compost: the common ones are Imidacloprid, Clothianidin, Thiamethoxam and Fipronil (also found in pet flea treatments). Return all such sprays to the shop and tell the manager why you will not buy them. Make sure your local gardening club / allotment association are aware of the dangers.

Gardeners may also be interested to know that Glyphosate (Roundup) has recently been shown to be much more toxic that Monsanto would like you to believe. In this report, Don Huber, Emeritus Professor at Purdue University and senior scientist on USDA's National Plant Disease Recovery System, links glyphosate to reduced nutrient availability in plants, increasing plant diseases, the emergence of a new pathogen, animal illness and possible effects on human health.
See http://www.i-sis.org.uk/USDA_scientist_reveals_all.php


EXTRACT FROM THE PURDUE PESTICIDE RESEARCH PAPER

"Our results demonstrate that bees are exposed to these compounds and several other agricultural pesticides in several ways throughout the foraging period. During spring, extremely high levels of clothianidin and thiamethoxam were found in planter exhaust material produced during the planting of treated maize seed. We also found neonicotinoids in the soil of each field we sampled, including unplanted fields. Plants visited by foraging bees (dandelions) growing near these fields were found to contain neonicotinoids as well. This indicates deposition of neonicotinoids on the flowers, uptake by the root system, or both. Dead bees collected near hive entrances during the spring sampling period were found to contain clothianidin as well, although whether exposure was oral (consuming pollen) or by contact (soil/planter dust) is unclear. We also detected the insecticide clothianidin in pollen collected by bees and stored in the hive."

"These findings clarify some of the mechanisms by which honey bees may be exposed to agricultural pesticides throughout the growing season. These results have implications for a wide range of large-scale annual cropping systems that utilize neonicotinoid seed treatments."


BBKA EMAIL ADDRESSES

PRESIDENT - Martin Smith - martin.smith@bbka.org.uk
CHAIRMAN - Brian Ripley - brian.ripley@bbka.org.uk
VICE CHAIRMAN - Dr David Aston - david.aston@bbka.org.uk
TREASURER - Michael Sheasby - michael.sheasby@bbka.org.uk
BBKA News and Year Book Editor - Sharon Blake m-s.blake@overstratton.fsnet.co.uk
Examinations Board Secretary - Val Francis valfrancis@blueyonder.co.uk
Public Affairs Director - Tim Lovett tjl@dermapharm.co.uk

TRUSTEES
Dr David Bancalari - david.bancalari@bbka.org.uk
Doug Brown - doug.brown@bbka.org.uk
Chris Deaves - chris.deaves@bbka.org.uk
Brian Dennis - brian.dennis@bbka.org.uk
Dawn Girling - dawn.girling@bbka.org.uk
John Hendrie - john.hendrie@bbka.org.uk
Roger Patterson - roger.patterson@bbka.org.uk
Julian Routh - julian.routh@bbka.org.uk
Michael Young - michael.young@bbka.org.uk


Let's make 2012 the year that British bee keepers take positive action to clean up our countryside - for the sake of the bees.

Best wishes
Phil Chandler

www.biobees.com
www.naturalbeekeeping.org
www.friendsofthebees.org

domingo, enero 08, 2012

Aguaaaa .....


Que no baste con las cenizas del Caulle.

Con la seca que tenemos encima y los pirómanos buscando entretención, que ahora se nos quema Chile.

Si se, es una exageración, pero igual es impresionante ver la imagen satelital y los focos de fuego y humo.

Necesitamos que llueva, al menos para apagar esos focos de incendio y bajar el material combustible.

Ni hablar del grano chupado y la falta de néctar para las colmenas.

El frente frío que anunciaba un par de posteos atrás ya bajo de 40 mm a 20 mm. Y aumenta el frío, incluso arriesgando una helada para la noche del martes.

Por el lado argentino la cosa es peor aún. Hoy hablaba con un reinero de Azul y me contaba lo mal que estaba la cosa por allá. Pastizales, rastrojos y otras vainas a punto de quemarse. Incendios que casi arrasan con una petrolera y varias casas interiores.

En el caso de Tasmania, después de mucho preguntar llegue a la conclusión que ellos suben las colmenas a la montaña por rutina, no necesariamente porque el Leatherwood vaya a dar algo. Habrá que esperar hasta marzo para saber si dio algo o nada.

Lo mismo para nuestro Ulmo, donde yo sigo pensando que será una temporada perdida.

En el caso del hemisferio norte, siguen los reportes de un invierno muy cálido y seco, por lo que las colmenas han seguido en postura y consumiendo no sólo las reservas del nido, sino que también las reservas corporales. Incluso hay reportes que el Almendro de California vendrá adelantado.

Malas noticias para las abejas. Poca miel para el mundo.

¿Subirá el precio pese a la estupidez europea?

lunes, septiembre 19, 2011

I told ya so !!!



This GMO issue is a problem not only in Germany. Maybe not a real problem, but a perception one. The EU market, the mayority of the consumers, do not want GMO, period.

While the Agro Biotech industry celebrates its 15th aniversary (2010) happy with the conquer of 29 countries around the world, several UK beekeepers are thinking "I told ya so!", in reference to the market impact of the past judgment of the european high court in relation to zero tolerance on GM pollen.

Some beekeepers have opposed the GM crops since its beginning (1999) ... at least this is what I gather from the internet (2000).

One of them have now a very anarquic proposal oppossed to any red tape in beekeeping. I liked the idea of the Old Farts!! (nice acronym) but the start of his debate was quite rude, calling RIGGED a DEFRA conference back in 2002.

Latter on (2004), the PR people even evaluated what when wrong in UK.

An looking at more recent news (2010) it seems this debate is far from over and is highly politized.

I really need to find a huge warehouse to keep my honey drums safe for a couple of years till I decide what to do with the honey or till this debate is over.

Would the GMO DNA pass the fermentation process? Would it be possible to make mead without traces of transgenic DNA?

What else could I do with my transgenic honey?