
WHAT'S THE BUZZ? Bees sampled from beekeeping operations afflicted with the perplexing colony collapse disorder have turned up a possible cause: a bee virus discovered recently in Israel.
Image: COURTESY OF ARS/USDA JAY D. EVANS
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The mystery illness that has bedeviled U.S. beekeepers since 2006 may stem from a bee virus that apparently spread to the U.S. from Australia three years ago, according to a new study that marks the first big break in the puzzling case of the disappearing bees.
Researchers performed a sophisticated genetic comparison of healthy and diseased U.S. colonies that revealed the presence of Israeli acute paralysis virus (IAPV), an obscure but lethal bee bug, in almost all beekeeping operations affected by "colony collapse disorder" (CCD), but in only a single healthy one they examined.
"We haven't proven this is the cause. It is a candidate for being a trigger for CCD," says W. Ian Lipkin, director of the center for infection and immunology at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, one of the study's lead members.
The disorder may also result from a combination of poor nutrition, pesticides and other factors, including infection, Lipkin and his colleagues say. They add that time-consuming tests are needed to determine whether IAPV can trigger CCD alone or in concert with other stressors, or whether certain combinations of stressors instead make hives vulnerable to the virus.
Israeli virologists discovered IAPV three years ago after investigating unexplained cases of dead bees piled in front of hives. The new study found the virus in samples of Australian bees, which were first imported to the U.S. three years ago.
If IAPV is the main trigger, researchers say, honeybees worldwide could be bred with strains of bees resistant to the virus, perhaps rescuing our nation's most economically valuable pollinator.
Bees are estimated to provide pollination valued at $15 billion every year and are already worked to the limit. Half of the nearly 2.5 million hives in the U.S. alone are needed to pollinate almond crops.
Late last year, reports surfaced that adult honeybees were mysteriously abandoning commercial colonies, leaving ghost hives full of honey, larvae and unattended queens. The disorder wiped out an average of 45 percent of bees among the 23 percent of commercial U.S. beekeepers affected last winter.
Researchers and conspiracy theorists have offered a number of potential explanations, from parasitic varroa mites to chemical pesticides to cell phone radiation that leads bees astray.
Entomologists Diana Cox-Foster of Pennsylvania State University and Jeffery Pettis of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service Bee Research Laboratory formed the Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group to try to solve the mystery.
A key line of evidence suggested that infection plays a major role: The group found they could restore empty CCD hives to health by restocking them with fresh bees—but only if they first irradiated the hives with gamma rays, which destroy DNA.
Based on that evidence, Cox-Foster and Pettis convinced Lipkin, who led the discovery of West Nile virus, to take up the case, using specialized technology manufactured by genome sequencing firm 454 Life Sciences in Branford, Conn.
The trio and their colleagues lumped together RNA—the chemical that encodes active genes—from four geographically separated commercial operations stricken with CCD and compared it with the combined RNA of apparently healthy bees from Hawaii and Pennsylvania. They also scanned seemingly healthy bees from Australia and imported royal jelly from China, which queen bees use to nourish young workers.
Overall, CCD bees carried more types of harmful microorganisms than healthy bees, the researchers report in the online edition of Science. To identify potential culprits, they analyzed individual hives.
IAPV showed up in 25 of 30 diseased operations but in only one healthy colony from the U.S., they report. In contrast, all CCD hives contained a related virus called KBV along with a single-celled parasite Nosema ceranae, which a prior study had linked with CCD—but both organisms were present in about 80 percent of the healthy hives, too.




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2 Comments
Add CommentHas anyone investigated the effects of increased ambient temperature and/or increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide on honey bees? Could these environmental factors be increasing vulnerability to parasites and viruses?
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisJust a thought the problem started about the same time we went rape seed mad we know the bees seem to like the pollen but could they be being slowly poisoned could the pollon be to rich..a bit like humans and beer ?
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