Disease, weather kill Vancouver Island bees
Last Updated: Tuesday, March 9, 2010 | 2:30 PM ET
CBC News
Pesticides designed to protect honeybees against the varroa mite have been losing their effectiveness, leading to heavy colony losses across Canada in recent years, researchers say. (CBC)Vancouver Island beekeepers say 90 per cent of their hives have been wiped out by a lethal combination of disease and a long summer last year.
Vancouver Island is home to a quarter of all the honeybees in British Columbia, but commercial operations were devastated over the winter by a high mortality rate for honeybees.
Scientists believe the mass die-off was caused by several factors, including the varroa mite, which makes bees susceptible to other viruses. A long summer also meant bees continued collecting pollen for a much longer time, which weakened them and make them more vulnerable over the winter.
The result has been a disaster for Vancouver Island producers, but it won't affect the price of honey, according to Paul van Westendorp, the provincial apiculturist at the B.C. Ministry of Agriculture and Lands.
'What is important is crop pollination — no bees, no berries.'— Paul van Westendorp, provincial apiculturist
The island isn't a large honey-producing region. Instead, most island bees are sold to other producers in more agriculturally intensive regions to build up their hives quickly during the honey-producing season.
But van Westendorp is concerned about the same trend showing up in the rest of the province, where honeybees play a critical role in agricultural pollination.
"In an agricultural context, what is important is crop pollination — no bees, no berries."
However, early anecdotal reports from beekeepers in the Interior are reassuring, van Westendorf says. Most say they aren't seeing massive die-offs but won't know for sure until April, when the bees become more active.
In the meantime, some island beekeepers say they will import new bees from New Zealand and other areas but they warn the cost many drive many of them out of business.
Pesticides designed to protect honeybees against the varroa mite have been losing their effectiveness, say agricultural researchers, leading to heavy colony losses across Canada in recent years.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Markets gain after Greece approves austerity plan
- World stock markets rise after Greece's parliament approves a new set of austerity measures that were required by international lenders in exchange for an emergency bailout. more »
- Hit and run victim's family fears accused will walk
- The family of a young mother killed in a hit and run is outraged that the case against the alleged driver is among thousands in B.C. at risk of being thrown out because of a huge court backlog. more »
- CBC launches digital music service
- CBC is diving into the world of online music with the goal of providing listeners access to their favourite tunes and a way to discover new artists and connect with fellow music fans. more »
- Neil Macdonald: The death penalty debate America isn't having
- Texas's death row archive is a troubling document, not the least for what it doesn't say about those who may be wrongfully convicted, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- CBC launches digital music service
- CBC is diving into the world of online music with the goal of providing listeners access to their favourite tunes and a way to discover new artists and connect with fellow music fans. more »
- Create-your-own-app product to launch in Moncton
- A Moncton entrepreneur is hoping to revolutionize the way mobile applications are created by launching a new product that allows people to develop their own app within minutes. more »
- Ancient Antarctic lake may harbour microbial life
- If scientists find microbes in a frigid lake 3.2 kilometres beneath the thick ice of Antarctica, it will illustrate once again that somehow life finds a way to survive in the strangest and harshest places, and it will offer hope that life exists beyond Earth. more »
- B.C. killer whale habitat protection ruled a legal duty
- The federal minister of fisheries has no discretion when it comes to protecting the critical habitat of B.C.'s southern resident killer whales, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Glacier Discovery Walk: Will the visitor centre enhance the view? Feb. 10, 2012 3:17 PM Environment minister Peter Kent has announced the construction of a new Glacier Discovery Walk and visitor centre on the Icefields Parkway in Jasper National Park. It raises the issue of how to balance commercial development in our National Parks against the preservation of the last refuges of wilderness.
Quirks & Quarks
- February 11: Inside the Mind of a Neandertal Feb. 10, 2012 4:01 PM Can we get inside the mind of a species that's been dead for 30,000 years? A new book, How to Think Like a Neanderthal, suggests we can. The authors reconstruct a creature like us in many ways, but with important differences.
Latest Features
- Adele wins best album, best record Grammys
- Houston autopsy results withheld by police
- Quebec town 'heartbroken' after killing of woman, sisters
- Pop queen Whitney Houston dies at 48
- Greece passes new austerity deal amid rioting
- Northern lights viewed from space
- Manitoba man dies after falling off moving SUV
- Doors blocked in fatal Manitoba trailer blaze
- Former Stanley Park petting zoo goats feared slaughtered

