75 Percent of Global Honey Samples Are Contaminated by Neonicotinoid Pesticides

Galseigin

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Dec 10, 2014
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China is the biggest producer of honey followed by Turkey. Turkey was caught producing fake honey by letting bees feed on water and sugar rather than flowers. (which could be healthier considering real honey has insecticide, but of course its not the real thing)

From the Amazonian rainforest to the mountains of Switzerland, bees are blending poison into their sweet honey.
Neonicotinoids, the neurotoxins common in pesticides, tainted around three-quarters of approximately 200 honey samples from around the world, researchers reported today in the journal Science.
“I purchased honey from an Indian chief when I was visiting central Brazil,” said Edward Mitchell, a biologist at the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. “I thought, ‘I’m buying this from an Indian. It will be pure honey.’ Guess what? It has pesticides.”

The findings don’t necessarily reveal the primary cause of colony collapse disorder — when worker bees leave their hive empty and don’t return — but they provide insight into yet another environmental factor that is putting stress on the pollinators that are crucial to the food chain.
“I’m happy to accept is multifactorial,” said Mitchell, referring to theories that colony collapse has many causes. “But if there is one factor we don’t need, it’s this one.”
Thirty percent of the honey sampled had one kind of neonicotinoids of the five commonly used in agriculture and gardening that Mitchell and his colleagues tested: acetamiprid, clothianidin, imidacloprid, thiacloprid, and thiamethoxam. Forty-five percent contained two or more. Ten percent contained four or five kinds of pesticides.
And 34 percent of the honey samples had concentrations known to be harmful to bees, including lowering reproduction rates and disorienting the critters so they can’t find their way back to their hives after they’ve found nectar.

Mitchell and his colleagues thought of surveying the honey after, without any purpose in mind, they’d amassed a collection of samples at the Neuchâtel Botanical Garden. They had compiled around 300 jars of honey whose origins and ingredients they knew based on labels and firsthand experiences like Mitchell’s in Brazil. They then chose samples from every continent but Antarctica to reflect the geographic diversity of the planet.
“We asked people to bring honey that was of specific origins, not just mixed honey,” he said. “We said, ‘This is something useful and precious.’”

Study co-author Alexandre Aebi contributed honey from his personal hive kept in an oak forest in the hills above Neuchâtel. Neither Aebi nor farmers nearby use neonicotinoids but people in the city must be spraying them, said Mitchell.
“People are planting flowers. They are buying flowers in garden centers. These flowers are loaded with pesticides,” he said. “For human consumption, we have very strict rules. There are no such things for garden centers.”

The fact that most honey contained toxins, even when it was produced in the most remote locations where beekeepers never use pesticides or nonorganic materials, was disheartening, said Mitchell.
“I’ve grown up hearing about enviro damage, the ozone depletion, whales dying, rhinos, everything,” he said. “We have become accustomed to this. This for me has been a wakeup call.”

https://www.seeker.com/earth/animal...acebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=seeker
 

dirkd101

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2005
10,336
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eastern frontier
I only buy honey that is made by Ontario. That's not to say that it has none of these pesticides present, but they are aware of these things and the harm that these have on the bee population and their relation to pollinating annual crops. So they help educate the consumer about such things, hoping that the word gets passed along. The initiative by the provincial government came about because of this.
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
39,638
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The price of honey will go through the roof.

EPA Chief Scott Pruitt is getting ready to scrap President Obama's Clean Power Act and President Nixon's Habitat Protection Act.

The first will mean more coal fired power plants will be back on line. That will mean the amount of lead coming back into the atmosphere will see a spike in Bi-polar disorder, infertility and more children born with autism and Downs Syndrome. The second will allow mining companies to dump their tailings into the watershed. This will result in the destruction of fisheries, increased pollution of fresh water and an overall decrease in food stocks.

And last but not least, the complete extermination of honey bees in the USA.
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
39,638
7,192
113
The use of lead in their plumbing brought about the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. They had only enough population to defend the Eastern half.

Hank Paulson, a lifelong environmentalist, must be furious.

 
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Galseigin

Banned
Dec 10, 2014
2,119
1
0
The price of honey will go through the roof.

EPA Chief Scott Pruitt is getting ready to scrap President Obama's Clean Power Act and President Nixon's Habitat Protection Act.

The first will mean more coal fired power plants will be back on line. That will mean the amount of lead coming back into the atmosphere will see a spike in Bi-polar disorder, infertility and more children born with autism and Downs Syndrome. The second will allow mining companies to dump their tailings into the watershed. This will result in the destruction of fisheries, increased pollution of fresh water and an overall decrease in food stocks.

And last but not least, the complete extermination of honey bees in the USA.
They had a 1 kilo jar of Manuka honey at costco last week for $55...but Manuka is considered to be almost an antibiotic and antibacterial....
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts