Bees (Apis Mellifera) or bees (bees) have survived on this earth for 50 million years. This bee is responsible for pollinating flowers, grasses, trees and crops throughout the world. Most of the food we eat depends on bees for pollinating. Our ecosystem depends on the survival of bees. With the introduction of parasites, viral and bacterial diseases, and agrochemicals and herbicides, honey bee's colonies have disappeared at an alarming rate all over the world. Over the past 6 years, on average, 30% of all American honey bee colonies.
Bees are highly likely to die of agricultural chemicals and malnutrition diseases. Marla Spivak, an entomologist at the University of Minnesota, uses bees to explain the plight of bees. Since the size of the rabbit is attached to the neck, when finally arriving at the food, you can see that there is a little poison. Then, influenza will disappoint you. A sick bee is a phenomenon known as self-exclusion of altruism, which brings hives to death. This can explain the massive disappearance of colonial collapse
I almost subscribed to this course, due to the annihilation of the bees, this is the documentary my husband and I saw a few weeks ago. Despite rumors that the bees are in danger, I mainly ignore their plight. The documentary scared me directly. When that was over, I turned my eyes to my husband, enlarged my eyes and was scared. "We have to save the bees!" A few weeks later, our rescue mission began. understood. My interest in beekeeping is not entirely charity. I hope that we can earn a little money in the process. Honey is basically liquid gold and we raised happy chickens in the backyard. By getting some nest boxes, we can save the bees, and in return, the bees can save our bank account. This makes mutually beneficial relationships
"People are desperately following this story," Pettis said. The predicament that the bees could not explain urged the country's amateur entomology. Researchers at Columbia University said, "Why not do more with jet jet aircraft?" The generation of pathogens badly hurt this problem. Ian Lipkin has never worked with a bee, but he and his laboratory collaborate with entomologists and other bee experts to find the genetic characteristics of pathogens appearing only in collapsed colonies . The method of searching for many samples, such as confused intestinal microorganisms and random parasites, is well known for metagenomics. At that time, the way to find pathogens was epoch-making, my colleague Diana Cox-Foster said. Then at Penn State University.