That beeswax is different
in composition than honey is obvious to beekeepers. That most
pesticides for varroa control used in Western Europe and the
USA are fat soluble substances and will have residues accumulate
in the wax combs, to give off sub-lethal dosages of these same
pesticides, is not so obviously understood by beekeepers. Even
less understood are the consequences of mixtures of sub-lethal
dosages coming together, that could be devastating to a hives
well-being 5-7 years into treatment with a pesticide with no
prior use of chemicals, and 2-3 years into treatment with the
second pesticide used, once mite resistance has totally developed
to the first pesticide used. If mite resistance to the chemical
develops 2-3 years into the second pesticide used, the beekeeper
very well may be left hanging to handle decontamination of a
bad chemical reaction internally, locked within the treated brood
combs themselves (residues migrated into the wax and held there
from each pesticide used in succession), now spread throughout
the whole hive structure by contact transfer migration that will
continue to give off chemical reactions effecting his colonies
well-being, until removed by decontamination procedures from
the hive. Beekeepers should have plans on how to handle this
situation, for it is coming, if not already here.
Fluvalinate has been approved for use in the USA for several
years now to fight varroa mites. The most current usage being
in the form of Apistan control strips. Now Coumaphos is being
rapidly approved in the USA for use under a Section 18 authorization
only, sold as Checkmite control strips, to combat both varroa
mites and small hive beetles! QUESTION: What do beekeepers know
about these two pesticides, in-hive effects of sub-lethal dosages
used either singly or mixed in synergism, locked into wax combs,
that they will be forced to deal with later on relevant to effecting
their colonies, health, plus decontamination?
SYMPTOMS OF CHEMICAL EFFECTS THAT SHOW THE PESTICIDES ARE WORKING:
Fluvalinate: USA beekeepers should be aware and I am sure many
of them remember reading in The Varroa Handbook, by Bernard Mobus
and Larry Connor, that "however inviting the treatment may
seem, we should heed a warning given to German beekeepers who
want to play as researchers, that FLUVALINATE could have neurotoxic
effect in humans (ADIZ, April 1987). Handle paper, wood or plastic
strips, or any other formulation of FLUVALINATE with great care
and gloves. In Agricultural Chemicals Book 1 Insecticides, 1992
Revision, we learn that fluvalinate is a synthetic-pyrethroid
compound used as a selective contact and stomach poison insecticide.
It may cause eye and skin irritation. It suppresses spider mite
populations. Further, it maintains its activity under high-temperature
conditions.
Fluvalinate is a Class 2 synthetic-pyrethroid compound that is
unique, in that besides maintaining its activity under high-temperature
conditions, it is a pyrethroid that works to the negative, in
that it gets stronger as the temperature gets colder (Chaney,
1988 PHD Thesis). What happens in this inverse relationship is
that the fluvalinate stored in the hive may not singularly cause
colony mortality, but will act in conjunction with other factors
i.e. temperature or interaction with other chemicals bees are
exposed to, to increase stress within a beehive and cause a decline
in population of adult bees in an overwintering situation. If
there are insufficient bees left coming out of winter to begin
hive build-up in the Spring, then colonies quickly crash with
inclement fluxional changes in the weather due to the chemical
inverse relationship to colder temperature (Note: Look for bees
dying around the outer layers of the cluster, like peeling the
outer skin off fruit or leaves dropping off of a tree, with each
successive cold snap, dropping in waves to the cold).
Reports of hives crashing from mite populations should therefore
also be tested for adverse chemical inversion to see which is
the real culprit! Chaney's PHD thesis showed that the relative
toxicity to adult honey bees of fluvalinate was shown to increase
at 18 degrees C and 12 degrees C. At 25 degrees C (77 degrees
F) the LD50 was 800ppm and observation of bee behavior was acceptable.
At 18 degrees C (64 degrees F) the LD50 dropped to 615ppm and
observation in bee behavior changed. At 12 degrees C (53 degrees
F) the values for fluvalinate were not shown due to the great
difference in magnitude as temperature dropped and continued
to drop, and the observation of bee behavior was bees not clustering;
no normal behavior observed and feeding was reduced significantly.
In the Varroa Handbook, by Mobus and Connor it was also pointed
out that bees exposed to fluvalinate had a memory loss in forager
bees, rendering them useless for nectar / pollen foraging (Beekeepers
not knowing what this means could equate this to short term memory
loses, like Alzheimer's disease, that gets progressively worse
as residue levels rise). Wolfgang Ritter pointed out in Chemical
Control: options and problems in Living with Varroa, Edited by
Matheson, that "the effectiveness, especially of pyrethroids,
persists for several months the mites emerging from the brood
are also killed, thus enabling a successful treatment for colonies
with brood...residues cannot be avoided, especially in wax, if
colonies are treated for a long period.
QUESTION: What happens when resistance sets in and mites stop
being killed, but the residues in the combs are still there reacting
against the bees, and now are contaminating the honey; or worse
yet, to fight the resistance - another chemical is added? In
Pollinator Protection, by Johansen and Mayer we learn that mixtures
of more than one pesticide are a special hazard to bees as relates
to certain insecticide-specific miticide combinations. In such
cases, the miticide appears to have a synergistic effect which
causes the mixture to be more hazardous.
Coumaphos: The first thing beekeepers need to learn now about
coumaphos is that the Agricultural Chemicals Book 1 Insecticides,
1992 Revision, by Thomson says "Do not use before or after
application of natural or synthetic pyrethrins or compounds used
to synergize them." This means that they react together
so that 1+1 does not equal 2. It will probably equal much more.
Coumaphos is a systemic, organic phosphate (nerve gas). What
this means according to Pollinator Protection by Johansen and
Mayer is that "The term organophosphate is a generic term
used to cover all the toxic organic compounds containing phosphorus."
They kill animals, including insects, by inhibiting cholinesterase,
a vital enzyme of the nervous system. Constant disruption of
nervous activity occurs at the nerve endings. Insects literally
jump their nerves to death.
Organophosphorus compounds ARE LIKELY TO CAUSE THE BEES TO BECOME
AGITATED AND AGGRESSIVE (Just what Calif. is looking for with
AHB syndrome on hand for public perception). They also cause
paralysis, abnormal jerky, wobbly, or rapid movements (Equate
to motor dysfunction in higher animals). Bees slightly affected
by some organophosphorus compounds will crawl up the walls of
the hive and fall to the floor over and over. Severe poisoning
(or high residue build-up) leads to lack of young workers. Poor
housecleaning is another sign typical to look for. Nectar is
often deposited in empty brood cells and queens may stop laying
simply because there is a lack of clean cells to receive the
eggs (propolis coating the brood cells has a high affinity for
chemicals).
So what does this mean? It means according to the chemical books,
we have two approved incompatible chemicals coming together with
effects outlined above to create new effects of the unknown.
Add then to this the fact that Florida in the USA, one of our
milder climates, is where coumaphos was first approved. This
is a relatively warm climate, even in the winter. Now it is approved
for much colder climates without prior pre-testing here in the
USA in those colder climates. It is known that chemicals applied
during cool weather retain a longer residual hazard and regional
differences in the hazard of a given pesticide can often be explained
in terms of differences in climate. If one equates this with
temperature variation and fluvalinate is known to get stronger
with its LD50 as the temperature goes down, then in about 2-3
years if not already this year, strange things could start happening
in our Northern USA states in beekeepers hives, as coumaphos
is added now to the scenario and these two chemicals mix with
residual action within the wax combs, giving off sub-lethal dosages
for the bees to contend with. I hope our industry is ready!
On another note briefly, even when using essential oils attention
must be paid to residues, because some of them downgrade the
scent and flavor of honey or reduce honey production or are even
injurious to human health. In the December 1999 issue of the
American Bee Journal, is an article beekeepers should read by
Heather R. Mattila and Gard W. Otis, titled "Trials of Apiguard,
a Thymol-based Miticide. Part 1. Efficacy for Control of Parasitic
Mites and Residues in Honey." In the article they write,
"Although not statistically significant, honey production
was reduced by 30% during the Apiguard treatment period, a result
which warrants further study."
QUESTION: Would not this be highly significant to beekeepers
pocket-books? Further stated in the article was, "The influence
of temperature on the evaporation of volatile oils is difficult
to regulate. High temperatures cause rapid vaporization of thymol,
exposing bees to lethal concentrations, while low temperatures
reduce vaporization and result in ineffective control of mites."
They further referenced that Cox et al (1989) found that colonies
treated with menthol during the summer registered significantly
lower colony weight gain and honey production. Bees were repelled
by strong vapors in hot weather; few bees were seen inside the
honey supers while large numbers of bees covered the fronts of
the hives. So much for approved alternate control in the USA.
QUESTION: What happens when equipment is mixed as hives die and
outfits go out of business or sell off equipment downsizing?
Who really knows what is going on within our beekeepers hives?
Now add to this the added compounded problems of illegal spray
or spraying per say during crop pollination and one can now really
say do the bees have a chance and why is there not more comb
rotation here in the USA.
--
Signed: Dee A. Lusby, Tucson, Arizona, USA, 1-520-748-0542
Email Address: deealusby1@aol.com |