Jan. 24, 2008
What's Wrong With The Bees?
Steve Kroft Reports On The Mysterious Disappearance Of Bees
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Play CBS Video Video What's Wrong With The Bees Over the past year, some beekeepers have lost up to 90 percent of their hives. The losses could have serious effects because honeybees help produce a third of the foods we eat. Steve Kroft reports.
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Interactive Eye On The Environment Find out how global warming, air pollution and alternative forms of energy impact our world.
"When I pulled into a bee yard in Florida, there was 400 hives of bees that three weeks before that looked great. And all of a sudden, here we got roughly 400 beehives that are totally empty," he recalls.
The bees were gone, and Hackenberg says he doesn’t know where they went. "I mean, I literally got down and crawled around. I mean, seriously, I got down on my hands and knees and crawled around. And there's no dead bees. There are no dead bees anywhere. I mean, you can't find any bees. They flew off someplace," he recalls.
The bees, Hackenberg says, never came back. It's something he says he'd never seen before.
Under normal circumstances bees don't get lost. They have a sophisticated navigation system that uses the sun and landmarks as points of reference. As a European documentary showed, they can travel up to two miles in search of food, then find their way back home by following the unique smell of their hive. And once there, they are able to direct other bees to the food source by doing what entomologists call "the dance," one of the most intricate languages in nature.
Within a few months, Hackenberg had lost two thirds of his bees. He and his son Davey began calling the Department of Agriculture and beekeepers around the country to see if they were having similar problems. And within a matter of weeks he discovered that many of them were experiencing the same thing.
First, Hackenberg showed 60 Minutes what a normal hive looks like.
"How many bees live in this hive?" a suited-up Kroft asks.
"This hive here just looking at it probably got close to 35, 40,000 bees in it," Hackenberg explains.
Then he showed Kroft a hive that is suffering from what scientists are now calling "colony collapse disorder," or CCD.
Not only were there no bees, the hive was filled with eggs and larvae. Bees almost never leave their young. The hive was also filled with honey that not even scavengers seemed to want.
Produced By Andy Court and Keith Sharman
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 147 CommentsSinginrick, did you change your name to KellyAFische? No, guess not, I can tell by the tone.
This post must be a sarcastic joke. Nobody could actually be this stupid.
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Was this posted by Bill O''Reilly??? Sounds like something he''d say... "Clearly New Jersey has a larger population than California, ''cause when I walk outside in Newark, NJ I see thousands of people, and when I walk outside in Eureka, CA I hardly see anyone"
As I have written last year in the San Francisco Chronicle, March 10 and November 10, 2007, there is ample evidence to give genetically modified crops a closer look as one of the causes of CCD. My own research has shown that non-farmland bees thrive and produce more honey than their farmland peers. The honeybee issue obscures the more serious observation that ALL insect species are being affected. John McDonald
A: Used only on crops that would not attract bees, and don''t need to be pollinated by bees?
Rick, maybe God can just make us some more bees. Why don''t you ask next time you visit him?
"Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature...It is the opium of the people."
Astounding that I have to actually spell things out, but answer is NEITHER. Darwin is simply stating the way nature works, period. Your value judgements show how ignorant you are of the world in which you exist. So, tell us all again, just what is your planet of origin?
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