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Bee Die-Off: Parasitic Fly Could Explain Phenomenon

First Posted: 01/04/2012 12:43 pm Updated: 03/05/2012 4:12 am

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Northern California scientists say they have found a possible explanation for a honey bee die-off that has decimated hives around the world: A parasitic fly that hijacks the bees' bodies and causes them to abandon hives.

Scientists say the fly deposits its eggs into the bee's abdomen, causing the infected bee to exhibit zombie-like behavior by walking around in circles with no apparent sense of direction. The bee leaves the hive at night and dies shortly thereafter.

The symptoms mirror colony collapse disorder, in which all the adult honey bees in a colony suddenly disappear.

The disease is of great concern, because bees pollinate about a third of the United States' food supply. Its presence is especially alarming in California, the nation's top producer of fruits and vegetables, where bees play an essential role in the $2 billion almond industry and other crops.

The latest study, published Tuesday in the science journal PLoS ONE, points to the parasitic fly as the new threat to honey bees. It's another step in ongoing research to find the cause of the disease.

Researchers haven't been able to pin down an exact cause of colony collapse or find a way to prevent it. Research so far points to a combination of factors including pesticide contamination, a lack of blooms — and hence nutrition — and mites, fungi, viruses and parasites.

Interaction among the parasite and multiple pathogens could be one possible factor in colony collapse, according to the latest study by researchers at San Francisco State University. It says the phorid fly, or apocephalus borealis, was found in bees from three-quarters of the 31 hives surveyed in the San Francisco Bay area.

The combination of a parasite, pathogens and other stressors could cause die-off, lead investigator John Hafernik said. The parasitic fly serves as a reservoir that harbors pathogens — honey bees from parasite-infected hives tested positive for deformed wing virus and other pathogens, the study found.

"We don't fully understand the web of interactions," Hafernik said. "The parasite could be another stressor, enough to push the bee over tipping point. Or it could play a primary role in causing the disease."

Hafernik stumbled onto the parasitic fly by accident. Three years ago, the biology professor looked for something to feed a praying mantis. He found some bees outside his classroom, placed them in a vial and forgot about them. When he looked at the vial a week later, he found dead bees surrounded by small fly pupae. A parasitic fly was feeding on the bees and had killed them, he said.

The fly is a known parasite in bumble bees. Scientists used DNA barcoding to confirm the parasite in the honey bees and bumble bees was the same species.

The fly might have recently expanded its host presence from bumble bees to honey bees, Hafernik said, making it an emerging threat to agricultural pollinators. The fact that honey bees live in large colonies placed in close proximity to one another and beekeepers frequently move the hives throughout the country could lead to an explosion of the fly population, he said.

The fly, which is found all over North America, could also become a threat to native bees.

Hafernik plans to expand his research to other parts of the country and to study the parasite's impact on agriculture in California's Central Valley.

Since it was recognized in 2006, colony collapse has destroyed colonies at a rate of about 30 percent per year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Before that, losses were about 15 percent per year from a variety of pests and diseases.

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FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Northern California scientists say they have found a possible explanation for a honey bee die-off that has decimated hives around the world: A parasitic fly that hijacks the be...
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Northern California scientists say they have found a possible explanation for a honey bee die-off that has decimated hives around the world: A parasitic fly that hijacks the be...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Cynth
[Your ad here.]
11:29 PM on 01/06/2012
Wonder if they've found this in European bees, which have been stricken by the phenomenon, as well...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kenneth Alton
02:59 PM on 01/05/2012
On the flip side, those of us fortunate enough to have a small plot of land or bit of lawn or space for a window box might wish to set aside a part of that and plant a variety of flowers for the sake of the bees. The first year we took out a bit of our lawn and replaced it with perennials and flowering shrubs (all chosen to flower at different points in the year) we saw few bees. Now, that little garden patch is literally humming.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GaryNMaine
Words offer the means to meaning...
11:02 AM on 01/08/2012
Bee populations have dwindled up here in Maine and this last spring I started working on putting more flowers around the property. Will do the same next spring.

This is really important.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daniel Zook
Just an observant Millenial.
10:21 AM on 01/05/2012
Zombees.... Watch out 2012 Hollywood I smell another zombie movie
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
09:46 AM on 01/05/2012
Over a year ago, I watched a documentary type show on TV (PBS I think) and while I DO believe this parasitic fly is also a demon, the researchers found that the abandoned hives they studies had very high degrees of nicotine. Nicotine is used in many pesticides. Just because we outlawed DDT years ago, doesn't mean we've made a "good/safe" spray. The hives were not sprayed with the drug, but the flowering plants they visited HAD been. We know smoking is bad for a human; imagine the effect on a tiny insect. The exponential effect of pesticides, along with this parasite are just too much for our little bee friend.
I have a question..WHY can't this stupid fly infect wasps and yellowjackets? To my knowledge..these aggressing "relatives" of our little honey bees serve NO real purpose (do they? I am asking..truly!). I'm not afraid of bumble bees..but MAN..yellow jackets just attack for no reason..they hate us..they want to destroy our freedom...okay..that was metaphor kind of...let's put the parasite in a big room with wasps..and make it into a TV show for those who love violence..maybe they'll eat and kill each other..no more flies..no more wasps!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gabe Brummett
Brawndo! The thirst mutilator!
10:21 AM on 01/08/2012
everything has a purpose,i know there is a 'predatory' wasp that hunts cabbage worms - i'm certainly grateful for them because they help me grow my brassicas!
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ChaiKat
Just trying to keep what little I have.
09:35 AM on 01/05/2012
Hopefully they can now concentrate a good amount of effort into this and finding a way to combat those parasites!
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
09:16 AM on 01/05/2012
I believe this fly has been identified before as a danger to honey bees. I seem to remember reading about the fly here in Mississippi about 20 or more years ago. The number of threats to honey bees continues to expand and in my opinion is a direct result of this nation allowing in so many foreign critters and plants for hobbyists. These critters escape, or are deliberately released by those who can't properly care for them, and they carry with them various diseases and other parasites that then affect native plants, animals, insects, etc. Add to that the large number alien plants, animals, etc. that hitchhike on imports and the problem is greatly magnified. We are about to see sassafras trees, red bay trees, spice bush and other plants of that nature disappear in the same way that the American chestnut disappeared about a century ago because of a beetle that hitchhiked into the nation on some packaging from Asia. This tiny beetle carries with it a fungus that kills the plants mentioned when the beetle bores into them. There is no known native predator of this beetle. This has happened because the Dept. of Agriculture's inspectors have been hijacked by the Homeland Security agency that is a farce itself.
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Stickman125
05:55 AM on 01/06/2012
You do realize that the honey bee is a not indigenous to North America but an invasive species introduced and intentionally released by people don't you?
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
09:12 AM on 01/06/2012
Actually, yes I do know that. In fact, from what I have read honey bees came over with very early settlers. I have read it came in both at Jamestown and at Plymouth in either the late 17th century or early 18th century.My reading on the subject is so far back I can't remember if there is any agreement on the first introduction and bees came into both sources independently or if there is some argument about the first introductions. However, this is one of the very few beneficial critters that have been introduced here. As a fisherman, I have heard the brown trout is another beneficial critter, but I disagree. It has been devastating to the native brook trout in many parts of its range. We could discuss this for a while, but I believe and, from what I have seen in various scientific papers, the vast majority of alien creature introductions, both deliberate and accidental, have been disasters for this country and its native species.
09:08 AM on 01/05/2012
Wow! Wouldn't this be interesting. I see a whole new genre of films emerging, "The Attack of the Zombie Bees."
03:22 PM on 01/06/2012
Zombees?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GaryNMaine
Words offer the means to meaning...
11:11 AM on 01/08/2012
There, we have a title. Too short? Well, we can add a colon and have the obligatory longer name, say,

Zombees: The Terror From Our Fields

or, as Hillary suggested,

Zombees: The Attack of the Zombie Bees

Hollywood, get on it!
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catz1515
04:14 AM on 01/05/2012
its probably a cocktail of cell phones, parasites and insecticides, all wrapped up with human negligence:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1385907/Why-mobile-phone-ring-make-bees-buzz-Insects-infuriated-handset-signals.html
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Andrew Harvey
Don't F with the Jesus
01:03 AM on 01/05/2012
Gee, I thought it was global warming killing off the bees.
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catz1515
04:10 AM on 01/05/2012
never heard that one.....links?? proof??
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
09:43 AM on 01/05/2012
he's being an@$$
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
GaryNMaine
Words offer the means to meaning...
11:35 AM on 01/08/2012
I know, Andrew. It is hard to believe that a species so vast as the honeybee, could be affected by the things we as humans do in life. That the minor changes that we make in how we live life can negatively affect the other important species that exist on this planet with us.

If we were in any way responsible as a species for the demise of other species, I would want to know about it, wouldn't you?

In the case of the honeybee, and a lot of other bee species, we humans simply cannot survive as a species without their presence on this planet. So, when their survival is threatened, we as rational-thinking humans must find out by whom they are threatened, how they are threatened, and provide solutions so as not to literally "kill ourselves."

Snarky retorts of the political bent serve no one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrew Harvey
Don't F with the Jesus
10:51 PM on 01/08/2012
A better question would be: If it weren't for humans, would those bees exist in the first place?

After all, the are of a domesticated variety, and they are in fact "breed", and they're even shipped to locations around the country, indicating that we are keeping their population artificially high, if anything.

Also, "die off" refers to the fact that they're not living up to their commercial value, not that they're an endangered species.

I will keep making my snarky comments, because its the only way to engage the space cadets such as yourself, who automatically jump to the conclusion that the world is going to end and its us that are causing it.
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Issaquah79
Look mom no head!
12:59 AM on 01/05/2012
There are many reasons honeybees and most native pollinators are struggling but the main reason for CCD is systemic pesticides introduced 10+ years ago. France and Italy banned these new pesticides a few years ago and their honey bees have bounced back. Watch Vanishing of the Bees streaming on netflix to learn more or here is their website.
http://www.vanishingbees.com/
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Zan1
"It is a sin to kill a Mockingbird." ~Harper Lee
01:22 AM on 01/05/2012
thanks for this resource.
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08:57 PM on 01/06/2012
Quote: "Researchers haven't been able to pin down an exact cause of colony collapse or find a way to prevent it. Research so far points to a combination of factors including pesticide contamination, a lack of blooms — and hence nutrition — and mites, fungi, viruses and parasites."

Your site: "Conflicting options abound and after years of research, a definitive answer has not been found to this harrowing mystery"
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beth24
12:24 AM on 01/05/2012
how much bad news can mankind bear?? again we have caused all these problems with overpopulation and environmental degradation. thanks humans
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beth24
12:22 AM on 01/05/2012
one really wonders if there is a devil in battle with good...if the bees were stronger they could fight this but they are compromised because of all the environmental stressors. all organisms when stressed especially unnaturally will succumb to disease and death
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B Kleitz
ghost hunter grammy DeadHead
08:48 PM on 01/04/2012
This is some serious chit right here, now.
We need not joke about it too long.
Almost everything we eat that is not grain, or meat, or fish, grows because of the bee, and to a lessor degree the other pollinators...butterfly's, dragonfly's etc etc...
This scares me way more than some pandemic flu...as I live in the country and grow most of my own veggies and fruits. I can stay away from the majority of the population for a goodly amount of time as long as I have food and water, but if there are no bees, I have limited food options.
If you think the price of food is high now, just wait til the bees are all gone.
Try buying one of the last peaches, or tomato's on the open market in a world with no bees!
07:35 PM on 01/05/2012
Albert Einstein is quoted as saying, "If the bee disappears off the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left."
07:27 PM on 01/04/2012
ZOMBEES! I get it.