This video is called Honey bees – Natural History 1.
And here is Part 2.
From New Scientist in the USA:
Bees to have their day in court over insecticide use
- 17:35 22 March 2013 by Michael Marshall
- For similar stories, visit the Endangered Species Topic Guide
The lawyers will be as busy as bees. The long-running row over insecticides linked to declines in bee numbers is going to court. Beekeepers and activists are suing the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), saying it should have banned neonicotinoid insecticides.
Neonicotinoids are relatively new chemicals but have already become widely used in recent years because they are taken up by all parts of a plant, giving comprehensive protection against crop pests. However, they may be partly responsible for the ongoing decline of pollinating insects like bumblebees. When ingested, they disrupt key behaviours like navigation, causing population declines. This week, the American Bird Conservancy, a non-profit group based in The Plains, Virginia, released a report claiming neonicotinoids also harm birds.
On 21 March, four beekeepers and five environmental groups filed a lawsuit against the EPA “for its failure to protect pollinators from dangerous pesticides”. The group had previously petitioned the EPA for an emergency ban on one neonicotinoid.
The EPA would not comment on the case, but a spokesperson said it was accelerating its review of the neonicotinoids “because of uncertainties about these pesticides and their potential effects on bees”.
A European Commission proposal to restrict the use of neonicotinoids in Europe recently failed to secure enough votes. The proposal would have forbidden the use of neonicotinoids on crops that attract bees, and at times of year when the chemicals were likely to be transported in dust. The proposal was triggered by a report issued in January by the European Food Standards Agency, which said it was not acceptable to use neonicotinoids on crops that attract bees.
“I was fully in support of the ban,” says David Goulson, an ecologist at the University of Stirling, UK. “The worst impacts on bees would have been removed.” He says similar restrictions could work well in the US. “The risks are the same, and the bees are essentially the same.”
Related articles
- Birds, bees, aquatic life killed by neonicotinoids (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Groups sue EPA over honeybee deaths, blame some insecticides (science.nbcnews.com)
- Stop bee-killing pesticides, Dutch parliament says (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Beekeepers sue EPA to ban pesticide, protect bees (sacbee.com)
- Groups sue EPA over honey bee deaths, blame some insecticides (reuters.com)
- You: Groups sue to protect bees and pollinators from pesticides (latimes.com)
- Neonicotinoids kill grassland birds (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Please – It’s About the Bees! (savetheepa.org)
- Without honeybees, we may cease to be (salon.com)
I.stand by the bee’s ! Great post and how do I get on that jury? π
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Thank you! I am not an expert in United States law, but I think you have to live in the state where that court case is π
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Reblogged this on Ann Novek–With the Sky as the Ceiling and the Heart Outdoors.
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