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Whale of a Time is riding the wave of change, promoting successful stewardship of our planet to create a peaceful, morally just, humane and sustainable culture, while ensuring survival of all species and their natural habitats. Whale of a Time organises creative and fun, inspiring and empowering events on environmental issues to encourage active participation living a sustainable lifestyle inspired by a positive attitude. We engage young and old from all walks of life through the Whale of a Time Community, the Whale of a Time Festival and the Whale of a Time Workshop. Our work has been recognised by many national and community and environmental awards schemes.
Whale of a Time Tweats
Sunday, 1 April 2012
BBC News - Insecticide blamed for bee deaths by Stirling University study
Use of a
specific group of insecticides is having a serious impact on bumblebee
populations, according to a team of Scottish scientists.
The Stirling University researchers found
exposure even to low levels of neonicotinoid pesticides had a serious impact on
the health of bumblebees.
Bee populations have fallen sharply, and
scientists say urgent action is needed to reverse the decline.
Of particular concern is an 85% drop in
the number of queens.
That means 85% fewer nests in the
following year.
Image above:
There is worldwide concern over the plight of the humble bee
The research found bumblebee colony
growth slowed after exposure to the chemicals.
This may partly be to blame for colony
collapse disorder, a mysterious phenomenon which has hit large numbers of hives
in Europe and North America in recent years.
Professor Dave Goulson, who led the
Stirling research, said: "Some bumblebee species have declined hugely. For
example in North America, several bumblebee species which used to be common
have more or less disappeared from the entire continent. In the UK, three
species have gone extinct.
"Bumblebees pollinate many of our
crops and wild flowers. The use of neonicotinoid pesticides on flowering crops
clearly poses a threat to their health, and urgently needs to be
re-evaluated."
Homing systems
Neonicotinoids were introduced in the
early 1990s and are now widely used around the world.
The chemicals are nerve agents that
spread to the nectar and pollen of flowering plants.
Doses of the pesticides used on crops are
not allowed to be lethal to bees, but the evidence suggests there may be
significant indirect effects, such as interfering with an insect's ability to
navigate.
The UN recently warned that the threat to
the honey bee was now a global phenomenon, but despite extensive research the
exact causes for declining bee populations are not known.
In a similar experiment, another group of
French researchers tracked foraging honeybees and found that the pesticides
tripled their chances of dying away from the hive.
The chemical was thought to disrupt the
bees' homing systems, causing them to get lost and perish.
The Stirling University research has been
published Science magazine.
Environmental group Friends of the Earth
called the findings "very significant".
Paul de Zylva, head of the group's Nature
and Ecosystems Programme, said: "The bee is a cherished icon of the
British countryside and our gardens and is the farmer's friend that helps
pollinate our food crops so we cannot afford further decline.
"We now need the Government to look
seriously at the emerging evidence from here and other countries and consider
whether neonicotinoid pesticides should continue to be used freely in the
UK."
Whale of a Time organises creative events on environmental issues to encourage active participation living a sustainable lifestyle inspired by a positive attitude. We work largely with children and young people at community and environmental festivals, and in schools and youth clubs. Our work has been recognised by many national and community and environmental awards schemes.
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