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DainBramaged

(39,191 posts)
Thu May 16, 2013, 12:26 PM May 2013

Feeding bees corn syrup may leave them vulnerable to colony collapse

mellifera, the western honeybee, is big business; the pollination services the bees provide to US agriculture are valued at roughly $14 billion. Unfortunately, bees the world over are suffering from colony collapse disorder (CCD), in which worker bees go out foraging and then disappear instead of returning to the hive and tending to the queen like they are supposed to. The causes of CCD are not clear, but pathogens, parasites, and pesticides have all been implicated. Neonicotinoids, a class of pesticides that have been shown to alter bees’ navigation, foraging, communication, and reproduction, have just been banned in Europe in an attempt to help the bees.

New research suggests yet another potential contributor to CCD. The problem? We’ve been stealing the bees’ honey and instead feeding them high fructose corn syrup. The problem isn't so much the fructose as the absence of chemicals in the honey.

Bees are exposed to a huge variety of plants because they gather nectar from the spring through the fall. The honey they make from these diverse nectar sources varies according to locality (leading to the unsubstantiated belief that eating local honey can alleviate seasonal hay fever). And bees’ “immune systems”—detoxification enzymes used to rid the body of foreign chemicals, like pesticides—are known to be induced by different stimuli than those of other insects. So scientists decided to check whether any components of honey can induce bees’ detoxification enzymes.

They started by separating honey into four different fractions and feeding each individually to different sets of bees to determine whether any induced a known detoxifying gene. The most active fraction contained p-coumaric acid, a structural component in the outer wall of pollen grains. Then they looked to see what other genes p-coumaric acid might induce and found twelve more detoxifying genes as well as two antimicrobials.


http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/05/feeding-bees-corn-syrup-may-leave-them-vulnerable-to-colony-collapse/


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Feeding bees corn syrup may leave them vulnerable to colony collapse (Original Post) DainBramaged May 2013 OP
One more reason Pab Sungenis May 2013 #1
Maybe it would be educational to feed these CEOs a diet of only HFCS siligut May 2013 #2
HFCS isn't bad for people I couldn't imagine how it would be bad for animals either, right? Victor_c3 May 2013 #3
get 5 pound bags of organic sugar at costcos for your bees and make your own... Javaman May 2013 #4
Nice DainBramaged May 2013 #5

siligut

(12,272 posts)
2. Maybe it would be educational to feed these CEOs a diet of only HFCS
Thu May 16, 2013, 01:49 PM
May 2013

What the hell? No wonder we have such enormous nutritional problems.

Victor_c3

(3,557 posts)
3. HFCS isn't bad for people I couldn't imagine how it would be bad for animals either, right?
Thu May 16, 2013, 03:54 PM
May 2013
(just in case it wasn't completely obvious)
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