East Essex Smallholders Chitchat Headline Animator

CONTACT EESG

To Contact EESG
Please Email:
Danielle.Perkins@yahoo.co.uk
or 07854595640
Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Bee concerns pose threat to OSR viability - 1/3/2013 - Farmers Weekly

Bee concerns pose threat to OSR viability

Charles  Abel
Thursday 03 January 2013 15:56

Oilseed rape growers could lose one of their most powerful weapons against pest and virus attack if fresh studies into the implications for bees prove valid. Crop revenues could tumble by £170m, leaving almost half of growers wondering if the crop is still worth growing.
At the heart of the debate lies the neonicotinoid group of seed treatment insecticides, primarily represented in the UK by Syngenta's thiamethoxam (in Cruiser) and Bayer's clothianidin (in Modesto). New studies suggest they could be contributing to, and may even have a primary role in, bee problems around the globe.
These powerful insecticides move into all parts of the plant, to control sucking pests like cabbage stem flea beetle, turnip sawfly and turnip yellows virus-spreading aphids. With easier crop management and a 0.35t/ha average yield response, virtually all UK crops are now treated.
But new studies suggest sub-lethal side effects could be contributing to bee colony collapse disorder. In June the French government banned Cruiser OSR, sending shockwaves around a crop protection industry fearful for the future of its fastest growing class of insecticides, with sales of well over €1.5bn/year.

AdTech Ad

The implications for farmers are stark too. French producers, forced to resort to broad-spectrum foliar sprays this autumn, can expect losses of up to €230m from lower yields, says Syngenta. A global ban would take €1bn/year from farmer pockets.
Timeline
  • March 2008 - Maize seed treatment error results in bee deaths in Germany
  • July 2012 - Cross industry ESTA European Seed Treatment Assurance scheme launched
  • June 2012 - Cruiser OSR banned in France
  • August 2012 - French court upholds ban
  • September 2012 - DEFRA rejects calls for a ban on neonicotinoids
  • November 2012 - UK Parliament's Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) hears evidence
  • Early 2013 - The European Food Safety Agency will report on its in-depth review into pesticides and their possible effects on bee health

Leading UK oilseed rape business United Oilseeds shares those concerns. "Should neonicotinoid use in the UK be prevented in the future, our growers would likely experience lower yields, poorer establishment and a raise in input costs from increased spraying requirements," a spokesman confirmed.
"As a farmer-owned co-operative, the welfare of the countryside and the environment is at the core of our ethos. But our current understanding is that there is significant debate about the robustness and validity of the French study that led to the ban in France.
"We also note that the European Commission has said it won't be rushed into a decision to ban neonicotinoids and that this decision is supported by the majority of member states."
A recent survey for Bayer of UK growers representing 15,000ha of OSR showed 87% felt a neonicotinoid ban here would adversely affect them, 86% felt crop establishment would suffer, 79% expected yields to fall, 90% would use more foliar sprays, 72% expected environmental implications, and 84% said they would have to spend more on pest control. Almost half (47%) said they would reconsider OSR cropping.
Campaigners opposed to neonicotinoids point out that bees provide a vital service pollinating crops, a recent Friends of the Earth study suggested they were worth an estimated £510m in the UK. Global bee pollination is valued at £128bn.
The genetic make-up of bees makes them particularly vulnerable, says the Soil Association, which believes there is enough evidence to justify an immediate ban. Green Party MP Caroline Lucas described Britain's attitude as one of "astonishing complacency".
Neonicotinoids used in sugar beet, wheat and barley could persist in soils, becoming available to bees when subsequent crops flower, the Pesticide Action Network suggests.
Clearly, neo-nicotinoids can harm bees - they are insecticides after all. So, growers need to heed label advice and not broadcast (or Autocast) treated seed, ensure it is well covered, avoid spills and carry a kit to clear up any that do occur, and particularly importantly, ensure any dust is retained in the product packaging, and if a pneumatic drill is used, modifications ensure any dust is vented into the seedbed and not the atmosphere.
Fine dust from maize drilling, which can contain up to 700,000 times the lethal contact dose for a bee, was linked to mass bee deaths in Germany and Italy. The newly instituted European Seed Treatment Assurance Scheme aims to prevent such acute poisonings.
Now the debate has turned to sub-lethal effects. Of course, a systemic chemical will be found in pollen and nectar at flowering, so bees do risk exposure. But how much residue bees are exposed to, whether it matters, and even more importantly, whether policymakers are listening to the scientific debate, or making politically motivated decisions, is unclear.
Not valid
French agricultural minister Stephane Le Foll banned Syngenta's Cruiser OSR in the light of two studies earlier this year which implicated neonicotinoids in hive collapse (see panel).
But Syngenta argued that the trials were not valid, and said the ban was "completely unfounded and contrary to any scientific and rational approach", not least because the trials force-fed bees unrealistically high doses, used an inappropriate model for bee colony decline, ignored official trial protocols, were inadequately replicated and took insufficient account of field conditions.
Cruiser OSR has been used on several million hectares of oilseed rape in Europe over the past 10 years without any damage to bees, noted Dr Phil Botham, Syngenta's European head of product safety. He pointed instead to habitat loss, colony collapse disorder caused by the parasitic mite Varroa and the viruses it carries (including a lethal form of deformed wing virus), and other honeybee diseases such as Nosema.
Keen to address bee decline, Syngenta promotes habitat creation through Operation Pollinator, and is now funding what it says is the most in-depth independent study of bee health issues yet, considering eight factors, including neo-nicotinoids, said Luke Gibbs, the firm's head of corporate affairs in Northern Europe.
It is also releasing its honey bee field trials data, which it says shows no effects on mortality, foraging activity, colony strength or over-wintering success during four consecutive years of exposure to thiamethoxam-treated flowering maize and oilseed rape. Pollen and nectar residue data from field trials is also being released.
Julian Little, government affairs manager for Bayer, notes that bee health showed no improvement in France even after a 10-year ban on imidacloprid seed treatment. Multi-factorial in-field studies with its successor, clothianidin, in several European countries, especially Germany for five years, would have hinted at sub-lethal effects, he says. But they never did.
In Australia, where neonicotinoid seed treatments are widely used, but Varroa and the associated viruses are absent, bees are the healthiest on the planet, he notes.
France wanted the European Commission and the European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) to impose an EU-wide ban. But EU Health and Consumer Commissioner John Dalli resisted, pending results from EFSA's two-pronged review into the approval of neonicotinoid active ingredients under the present regulations and the regulations themselves. Results are due in early 2013.
In the meantime no other country has followed France's lead, despite many reviewing the new studies.
DEFRA took advice from four independent bodies: the Chemicals Regulation Directorate; DEFRA's Food and Environment Research Agency (Fera) bee unit; Defra's Science Advisory Council; and the Advisory Committee on Pesticides.
Together with parallel work by EFSA that convinced it there were no serious implications for bee health. "There is a concern that the laboratory studies did not simulate adequately the field conditions," chief scientist Sir Bob Watson said.
The National Bee Unit at Fera found no evidence linking neonicotinoids directly to any case of bee mortality. Existing field studies on neonicotinoids showed no significant differences between hives exposed to treated crops and hives exposed to untreated crops.
But application methods, and lethal and sub-lethal effects, will be taken into account in a new risk assessment for bumble bees and solitary bees, alongside an updated risk assessment for honey bees, due in 2013, says DEFRA. Products failing to meet the new standards would have their authorisations restricted or withdrawn.
Meanwhile, the EU Agriculture and Rural Development Committee has asked the EC to increase research and produce an action plan to conserve bees. "When the action plan is produced, we are ready to give member states a deadline to use or not use a specific pesticide - until then it is up to individual states," said Paolo de Castro, the committee's chairman.
Finally, Parliament's Environmental Audit Committee is investigating the reasons why Defra has not taken more action, says chair Joan Walley. The worry is the number of sceptics on what is inherently a political committee, noted Syngenta's Mr Gibbs.
Indeed, anti-pesticide groups, keen to have pesticide use reduced or banned outright, are loudest in calling for a neonicotinoid ban, says Mr Little. Bee and pollinator groups, by contrast, want more research, and if a smoking gun is found, tighter regulations, he says.
Whether UK growers are subjected to restrictions or a ban remain to be seen. If they are, there seems to be every likelihood that ideology, not technical issues, could be to blame.

Bee concerns pose threat to OSR viability - 1/3/2013 - Farmers Weekly

Monday, 2 July 2012

Too many bees?

Interesting article:

This is an interesting perspective on the current thinking of experts such as the LBKA, University of Sussex research fellows and the Friends of the Earth who are behind the Bee Cause campaign. Data suggests that 1 sq km of forage can sustain about 5 colonies. Consider that only 25% of that space in London is green and then how much within that is planted in a way that is beneficial to bees. Within a 10 sq km area of my apiary in NW5 which is fifteen minutes from Oxford Circus the NBU has 466 apiaries listed. There will be at least two or three hives at each so that totals a possible 1398 colonies. Only 75% of people register their hives so you can increase this figure by 25% = 1747 hives which equals 174 hives per sq km which is way, way higher than the 5 we think can be sustained. Steve Bebow is right that the weather has played its part this year but the underlying trend, regardless of weather, is that honey yields are decreasing below the level that bees need to get themselves through the winter … an all time low in 2010 of 31lbs per hive across the SE and bees need 35 lbs just to survive the cold months. NBU Bee Inspector’s have been saying for some years now that they think there are too many bees in London. Steve’s reaction is emotional rather than factual and very common amongst bee keepers who make a living from keeping bees for corporates. “Saving bees” does not necessarily mean keeping bees and those that choose to do so will get the support of the LBKA since we have a strong ethos of responsible bee keeping. The LBKA has a message of education, encouraging more forage and not keeping bees on rooftops higher than a tree. They have not evolved to live at heights unnatural to them. The tide may be turning though as corporates begin to understand that piling more bees into Central London may be contributing to the demise of the bee and other pollinating insects who suffer in the competition for nectar and pollen.

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

National Honey Week - 7-13 May 2012


Celebrate National Honey Week – get this natural food source from your local beekeeper who you can find here. Honey is a natural food source and is the only one humans eat provided by an insect - the Honey bee. It is sweeter than sugar, but has less calories and is broken down quickly by our bodies. Whether struck down by a cold, sore throat or have a minor burn honey can help soothe the problem. Use it in your cooking, spread it on your body as a mix of salt scrub or on your toast it really is the natures golden elixir.



Interesting honey facts:

Honey bees must gather nectar from two million flowers to make one pound of honey.

One bee would therefore have to fly around 90,000 miles - three times around the globe - to make one pound of honey.

The average honey bee will actually make only one twelfth of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime.

A honey bee can fly as fast as 15 miles per hour.

It takes one ounce of honey to fuel a bee's flight around the world.

A honey bee visits 50 to 100 flowers during a collection trip.

Worker bees are all female.

Flowers have bright markings and strong smells to attract bees and other insects so that they will pollinate flowers. Some also have dark lines called 'honey guides' which scientists believe help insects find their way into the flowers.

A colony of bees consists of tens of thousands of worker bees, one queen and sometimes drones (male bees).

The honey bee is the only insect that produces food eaten by man.

Honey has always been highly regarded as a medicine. It is thought to help everything from sore throats and digestive disorders to skin problems and hay fever.

Honey has antiseptic properties and historically was often used as a dressing for wounds and a first aid treatment for burns and cuts.

Honey lasts for ever - or nearly. An explorer who found a 2000 year old jar of honey in an Egyptian tomb said it tasted delicious!

The natural fruit sugars in honey - fructose and glucose - are very quickly digested by the body. This is why sportsmen and athletes use honey to give them a natural energy boost.

The Romans used honey instead of gold to pay their taxes.

Honey bees have been producing honey in the same way for 150 million years.

The bees' buzz is the sound made by their wings which beat 11,400 times per minute.

Bees feed their larvae on pollen or 'cakes' made from pollen and saliva, using honey as a source of food during winter months. As they make more than they need, we humans can share the fruit of their labours.

The term 'beeline' comes from the 'bee line' these clever insects make to the flower of their choice, using the shortest route possible.

When a bee finds a good source of nectar it flies back to the hive and shows its friends where the nectar source is by doing a sort of dance positioning the flower in relation to the sun and the hive. This is known as the 'waggle dance.'

In Ancient Egypt honey had a role in births, deaths and marriages; it provided the energy and inspiration to create a child, was used to make special honey cakes as an offering to placate the gods and was an ingredient in embalming fluids.

Nearly one million tonnes of honey is produced worldwide every year.

Honey's ability to attract and retain moisture means that it has long been used as a beauty treatment. It was part of Cleopatra's daily beauty ritual.

In India , Krishna, as an avatar of Vishnu, has a blue bee in the middle of his forehead. Soma, the moon, is called a bee.

The Greek Great Mother was known as the Queen Bee, and her priestesses were called Mellisae, the Bees.

In Celtic myths, bees possess a secret wisdom garnered from the other world.

In Australia and Africa bees are found as tribal totems.

|

Monday, 19 March 2012

What is killing our honeybees?

ABC News


What was killing all those honeybees in recent years?  New research shows a link between an increase in the death of bees and insecticides, specifically the chemicals used to coat corn seeds.

The study, titled “Assessment of the Environmental Exposure of Honeybees to Particulate Matter Containing Neonicotinoid Insecticides Coming from Corn Coated Seeds,” was published in the American Chemical Society’s Environmental Science & Technology journal, and provides insight into colony collapse disorder.

Colony collapse disorder, or the mass die-off of honeybees, has stumped researchers up to now. This new research may provide information that  could lead to even more answers.

According to the new study, neonicotinoid insecticides “are among the most widely used in the world, popular because they kill insects by paralyzing nerves but have lower toxicity for other animals.”

Beekeepers immediately observed an increase in die-offs right around the time of corn planting using this particular kind of insecticide.

Pneumatic drilling machines suck the seeds in and spray them with the insecticide to create a coating before they are planted in the ground. Researchers suspected the mass die-offs could have been caused by the particles of insecticide that were released into the air by the machines when the chemicals are sprayed.

The researchers tested several methods to make the drilling machines safer for bees. However, they found that all variations that used the neonicotinoid insecticides continued to cause mass die-offs of bees.

Honeybees are critical for pollinating food crops. Scientists say the disruption of pollination could dramatically affect entire ecosystems. In addition, as the researchers wrote in the study, “In view of the currently increasing crop production, and also of corn as a renewable energy source, the correct use of these insecticides within sustainable agriculture is a cause of concern.”






Monday, 25 July 2011

Beekeeping Beginners Course



To all those budding 'would be' beekeepers the best place for you to start learning about bees is by attending a Beginners' Beekeeping course


For those interested in keeping bees, please contact


Jean Smye
07731856361


Jean will be running a beginners course over the winter months in preparation for the 2012 season.


For those interested in getting a head start, here is a short list of books you could have a look at:








This book is often seen as THE guide to bees and beekeeping or The Beekeepers' Bible.  A must have for the beginner and expert alike!






A beautiful book that is both a guide to beekeeping and a cookbook!  An easy to read guide to keeping bees for the 'health' conscious.  A complete honey bee resource.


A lovely addition to the Beekeepers Library with a synopsis by Guru Ted Hooper on what shrubs, perennials and trees to plant for the benefit of your bees as well as other beekeepers.


Start this autumn by adding some of those described inside to your garden, allotment, smallholding or micro farm!


Article next week on:      


The Beehive - what you need and some links to hive manufacturers!  



Thursday, 5 May 2011

Swarm of Bees?

Do you have a problem with a swarm of bees?

Does the swarm look like this?


or this.....

need help....

then call your local beekeeper


Chelmsford 2011 Swarm Rota

Monday
Brian Bull
07957 493620

Tuesday
Paul Harris
07812 693961

Wednesday
Richard Alabone
07906 929730

Thursday
Paul Harris
07812 693961

Friday
Ian Grant 
07705 502137

Saturday
John Blanks
07979 708338

Sunday
Caroline Wheeler
07979 708338

for other areas in Essex 
contact the local co-ordiantor for advice


Braintree
Nobby Clarke: 01277 220561



Chelmsford
Jean Smye: 07731856361 Website 



Colchester
Lydia Geddes: 01206 392226 Email



Dengie Hundred & Maldon
Jean Smye: 07731856361 Email


Epping Forest Website 


Harlow
Eric Fenner: 01245 420622  Website  



Romford
Pat Allen: 01708 220897 Email  



Saffron Walden

Jane Ridler: 01279 718111 Email

Southend
Email:Mary Heyes 
Swarm Collection List: Swarms


for all other areas 

go to the 

or ring

Swarm Help Line
The BBKA swarm help line is manned Mon - Fri 9.00am - 5.00pm Tel: 07896 75120



Monday, 21 March 2011

Honey For Sale

Beekeepers, Glenn and Thaine Mayes 
are pleased to still be able to supply a 
small amount of liquid Gold!


Only £3.50 a jar.  

Get yours now !!!

Contact:
07979 862952


Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Support the Bee Campaign

Sign up at


To lobby the Government to do more and provide funds for research into Colony Collapse Disorder and why the number of honey bees are declining in the UK.


Tuesday, 25 January 2011

I thought a chicken was a chicken!

When is a chicken not a chicken?
Answer:  When it's a Cream Legbar!

Visit Pipineggs.co.uk and you will see that there is no such things as “just” a chicken!

Large chickens include:
 Bantams include:


Jason and Lisa have provided a great, yet simple, encyclopaedia of chicken breeds with useful link for fertile eggs and general information on breeding. 

A website worth a browse!

Monday, 24 January 2011

Beekeeper - Glenn Mayes from Ulting - checking the hives summer 20010






checking the hive for disease, brood, honey

two hives - one on left is called Buckingham Palace,
the one on the right is called Wonderland.
we had loads of problems last year with Buckingham Palace - there's a surprise!
honey - dark "bits" are pollen

Lovely honey on a good laden frame

Honey Extracting

putting frames into the honey extractor

frame of honey - the dark "bits" are pollen

two hives made by Thomas Bickerdike
there is also a homemade nuc which is housing a small swarm following intruders knocking over one of the hives
and splitting it.


the homemade nuc - we use a glass chicken water feeder to provide fresh water for the bees
all through the season.  so that the bees can take water easily, stones are put into the lip so that
they don't drown.  dead bees don't produce honey!