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To Save the Honey Bee, Researchers Are Turning to Mushrooms
Tuesday, 09 May 2017 08:12

Bechtel writes: "Bee populations have been in flux for the past decade. Colony collapse disorder was a crisis - until it wasn't. And then, last year, bee die-offs were high again. There are a number of suspects, but one contributor to the decline is varroa mites."

A honey bee. (photo: Flickr)
A honey bee. (photo: Flickr)


To Save the Honey Bee, Researchers Are Turning to Mushrooms

By Abigail Bechtel, Grist

09 May 17

 

ee populations have been in flux for the past decade. Colony collapse disorder was a crisis — until it wasn’t. And then, last year, bee die-offs were high again.

There are a number of suspects, but one contributor to the decline is varroa mites — nasty parasites that suck bees’ blood, attack larvae, and spread disease, decimating hives.

Researchers at Washington State University have been fighting back by treating hives with mushroom spores and extracts that are toxic to varroa mites. As a bonus, the mushroom’s antiviral properties keep bees healthy and living longer.

Watch this video by Louie Schwartzberg for bioGraphican online magazine about nature and sustainability, to learn more:


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Last Updated on Tuesday, 09 May 2017 08:15