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Pollinator Security
Fungi terminator for bee killer
THE buzz around declining honeybees might recede somewhat.
Researchers at the University of Warwick in the UK are studying
ways to deliver a naturally occurring fungi into beehives
to kill the varroa mite-one of the biggest threats to honey
bees.
The mite, which is native to Asia entered the UK in 1992
ravaging 30-50 per cent of honey bee colonies. Varroa mite
feeds on the circulatory fluid of the pupae and adult of honeybees
and transmits diseases to the honeybee reducing its life expectancy.
This leads to a decline in the bee colony, which in turn affects
the pollination of commercial crops and wild plants.
Though pesticides can control the mite, it is gradually becoming
resistant to it.
Scientists have now started looking at the biological control
technology option to manage the pest. According to Dave Chandler,
a researcher at the University of Warwick, 50 different types
of entomopathogenic fungi (fungi that afflicts other insects)
were tested. The researchers have now zeroed in on four fungi.
Identifying ways to introduce the fungi into beehives remains
a challenge though. Scientists are mulling over options ranging
from fungal footbath at the main entrance of the hives to
powder sprays. The complex design of honeycombs could mean
that more complicated ways of introducing the fungi may have
to be put into use.
Meanwhile, scientists at the University of Toronto have found
another reason for the decline in pollinating bee populations.
In a study published in the July 23 issue of the online, open-access
journal PLoS ONE, Michael Otterstatter and James Thomson of
the University of Toronto present evidence that commercially
produced bumble bees used in greenhouses are infecting wild
pollinators, thus leading to a decrease in the natural pollinating
bee population.
Source : Down To Earth
Date: September, 2008

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