I tried searching but didn't find anything.I'm sure people have heard about the bees dying out. http://edition.cnn.com/2008/US/06/27/bees.food.prices.ap/index.htmlMy question is, why don't farms try to maintain their own in-house hives rather than relying on bees shipped in every season? How long has the practice of moving bees from farm to farm been going on? I don't know anything about beekeeping (the class was always full when I tried to sign up for it ) so I'm really curious.
6/27/2008 10:22:07 PM
i thought they DID use their own bees.
6/27/2008 10:24:52 PM
Apparently a lot of farms these days rent bees to pollinate their crops, which is what is causing part of the bee shortage.
6/27/2008 10:26:18 PM
because farmers aren't beekeepers. CCD is still not fully understood, it has been observed in wild hives and cultivated hives.
6/27/2008 10:32:35 PM
maybe if we imported more productive bees from africa...
6/27/2008 10:42:12 PM
^^ That's kind of what I'm wondering though. Why wouldn't a farmer be able to maintain a small hive of his own? Or try to encourage a wild colony or something.
6/27/2008 10:45:08 PM
farmers need pollinators for two weeksapiarists need a consistent source of nectarit's more cost-effective to move the bees to whatever crops are in bloom at the time
6/27/2008 11:08:28 PM
i was wondering why farmers didnt keep beehives just the other day
6/27/2008 11:20:33 PM
6/28/2008 12:33:39 AM
6/28/2008 1:59:04 AM
let the bees die out. they're not supposed to be here in america anyways use butterflies instead
6/28/2008 6:37:40 AM
In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women.
6/28/2008 10:56:16 AM
on the news:Honeybee shortage may increase food prices
6/28/2008 11:00:57 AM
the trees are going to kill us
6/28/2008 11:26:36 AM