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Colony
Collapse Disorder:
Soy Tie to Bee Die-Off?
By Kaayla Daniel, PhD, CCN
Honeybees are going missing from their hives and no one knows why.
The missing bees are presumed dead though investigators have yet to
find bodies to autopsy. The phenomenon—labeled Colony Collapse
Disorder (CCD)—has appeared in at least 22 states and Canada,
and to a lesser extent in Germany, Switzerland and India. Beekeepers
have reported losses as high as 70 percent on the east coast and in
Texas, and as high as 60 percent on the west coast. The U.S. beekeeping
industry—and the farmers that depend on bees —are in turmoil
as bees are desperately needed to pollinate fourteen billion dollars
worth of crops, mostly fruits, vegetables and nuts. Major media from
the NY Times to the BBC have been abuzz with bad news of future food
shortages and economic ramifications that will "sting."1-7
Here Today, Gone Tomorrow
As the name Colony Collapse Disorder suggests, this is not a slow
die off but a rapid collapse—often occurring with no warning in
just two or three weeks. As California beekeeper David Bradshaw told
the NY Times, "I have never seen anything like it. Box after box
after box is just empty. There's nobody home." What's happening
is clearly different from the 20 percent die off typically reported
by beekeepers during the off season or from disease-related regional
losses.8
Although the bees may be falling prey to disease, they aren't dying
in or in front of the beehives. They are either dropping dead from exhaustion
in the fields or becoming disoriented and dying from exposure. What's
clear is they aren't taking off in search of new adventures—or
greener pastures; bees are hardwired with strong social ties to their
queen bee and offspring.
What's To Blame?
Pathogens, pesticides, signals from cell phone towers, GM (genetically
modified) crops, MSG in plant-growth promoters (see sidebar, page 49)—and
combinations of these factors—have all been blamed for Colony
Collapse Disorder. But the evidence is inconclusive at best. Pathogens
and pesticides have long been implicated in the world's declining bee
population, which has dropped in half since 1971.9 The Varroa destructor
mite, an import from Asia, feeds like a tick and is a known bee killer.
Accused—but never proven guilty—of causing the "Vampire
Mite Scare" of winter 2004-2005, the mite is blamed for weakening
the bees but not killing them off in Colony Collapse Disorder.10,11
The aggressive insecticide usage of commercial agriculture has also
led to weakened bees. Poisoning is one problem; acres of monocrops coupled
with destroyed native vegetation is another. Without the opportunity
to forage for a rich variety of nectars, bees cannot stay healthy and
strong.12 The question is whether insecticides are triggering the sudden,
catastrophic losses of Colony Collapse Disorder.
Many insecticides kill with neurotoxins which at low doses could impair
the bees' ability to navigate home to their hives. A likely suspect
is the neonicotinoid imidacloprid, which has been banned in many European
countries but which is widely used in the US. This type of pesticide
is applied to the soil and taken up into the plant's tissues, including
pollen and nectar. Imidacloprid can cause symptoms in keeping with CCD.
Termites, for example, have suffered immune system breakdowns and disorientation.
The problem is proving it. Today's bees are transported from one crop
to another and exposed to so many different insecticides that it's nearly
impossible to establish cause and effect.13,14
Signals from cell phone towers may also be throwing off the bees' navigation
systems. This theory has led to lots of buzz about whether cell phones
are wiping out our bees. However, investigators have not found increased
bee disappearances near the towers.15,16
Perhaps it's the GM crops. The Sierra Club's Genetic Engineering Committee
sent a letter to Senator Thomas Harkin expressing serious concerns about
the bees' "exposure to genetically engineered crops and their plant-produced
pesticides."17
German researchers have shown that exposure to corn pollen containing
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) genes may weaken the adult bees' defense
against infectious agents such as Nosema. Add in the fact that the Colony
Collapse Disorder Working Group found weakened bees harboring Nosema
infections and it's no wonder people are pointing the finger at GM crops.
However, the group found the high levels only in samples of bees from
Pennsylvania, not everywhere else. Furthermore, CCD has occurred in
areas where no GM crops have been planted.18
Speaking to a reporter for the German publication Der Spiegel, Walter
Haefeker of the German Beekeepers Association said: "Besides a
number of other factors, the fact that GM insect-resistant plants are
now used in 40 percent of cornfields in the US could be playing a role.
A research project conducted at the University of Jena from 2001 to
2004 examined the effects of pollen from a maize variant called Bt corn
on bees. A gene from a soil bacterium had been inserted into the corn
that enabled the plant to produce an agent that is toxic to insect pests.
The study concluded that there was no evidence of a toxic effect of
Bt corn on healthy honeybee populations. But when, by sheer chance,
the bees used in the experiments were infested with a parasite, something
eerie happened. According to the Jena study a significantly stronger
decline in the number of bees' occurred among the insects that had been
fed a highly concentrated Bt poison feed."19
Hans Hinrich Kaatz, a professor at the University of Halle and the
director of the Jena study, explained that the bacterial toxin in the
GM corn may have "altered the surface of the bee's intestines,
sufficiently weakening the bees to allow the parasites to gain entry—or
perhaps it was the other way around. We don't know." Der Spiegel
reported that Kaatz would like to continue his study, but lacks necessary
funding. "Those who have the money are not interested in this sort
of research and those who are interested don't have the money,"
he said.20
No Type B Bees
What else might be triggering CCD? Stress and weakened immune systems.
The Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group—a group of researchers,
extension agents and regulatory officials that have teamed up to investigate—found
that colonies experienced "extraordinary stress" prior to
the collapse and this was the only factor present in all cases. Pesticides,
GM crops, cell phone towers, etc. are all sources of stress, and the
Working Group also pointed to frequent moving of colonies, poor nutrition
(from pollinating commercial crops with little nutritional value) and
drought.21
Investigators have found so many infectious agents in surviving adult
bees that many have diagnosed "immunosuppression" from an
unknown toxic agent. Because this could make bees more susceptible to
what ultimately kills them off, Dennis Van Engelsdorp, a bee specialist
with the Working Group, warned that it "could be the AIDS of the
bee industry." Autopsies of surviving bees revealed extensive viral
and fungal coinfections. Commercial bees could also be suffering immune
system depression because of routine and heavy antibiotic and miticide
use.22,23
Sugar Blues
In bees, as in humans, diet would play a key role in immunosuppression.
Bees transported from one commercial monocrop to another lack access
to nourishing nectar and pollen from wild flowers and other natural
vegetation. To keep them alive, active and profitable, beekeepers feed
commercial bee feeds made primarily out of two ingredients—sugar
(usually in the form of high fructose corn syrup) and soy protein. The
sugar is used to "stimulate" breeding, pollen collection and
"improve the morale of the colonies generally."24,25 But if
sugar affects bees the way it does humans, the initial "sugar high"
leads to a low characterized by anxiety and "brain fog." No
wonder so many bees are sick and disoriented!
Sugar is a notorious health destroyer that adversely affects every
system in the body, including the immune system. High fructose corn
syrup (HFCS) is even worse.
Soy protein—and its estrogenic isoflavones—could also weaken
the bees' immune systems and harm their brains. In mammals, soy has
been shown to damage the hippocampus, an area of the brain involved
with learning and memory. In the insect brain, mushroom bodies serve
similarly and might also be adversely affected by soy.26-28
Animal studies have linked increased phytoestrogen levels to decreased
brain calcium-binding protein (needed for protection against neurodegenerative
disease) and decreased brain neurotrophic factor (essential for the
survival and genesis of brain cells).29,30 Clearly it's time for some
studies on sugar, soy and bee brains and bee health. Many of the bee
feeds use soy flour, a low-tech product that is nonetheless high in
phytoestrogens. Bee feeds made with textured vegetable protein or other
modern soy products are not only high in phytoestrogens but excitotoxins
and other neurotoxic residues that are byproducts of fast and cheap
modern processing methods.31
Common sense tells us that bees malnourished on sugar and soy have
a poor chance of fighting predators such as mites. Likewise, they are
ill-equipped to survive poisoning from insecticides whether these are
applied to soil or plants or incorporated into the very fabric of GM
crops. What's more, the corn syrup and soy protein ingredients found
in these new bee feeds are both likely to come from GM crops, throwing
GM toxins, antinutrients and residues into the brew. Unfortunately,
the soy-sugar feeding theory is open to challenge—at least as
the primary cause of DDC. The Working Group's investigators claimed
that some beekeepers fed their bees, but not all.32
Years ago, Albert Einstein warned: "If the bee disappeared off
the surface of the globe then man would only have four years of life
left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals,
no more man."
Sidebars
Emperor's New Robes
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) has come up with an exciting new way to
manufacture tasty low-carb munchies. The patented new method involves
blending soy protein with wheat gluten. This mixture can then be forced
through an extruder—just like Styrofoam peanuts and plastic toys—and
dried to produce products such as crisps, cereal pieces, cookies and
snack bars, which are known in the food product business as "enrobed
convenience snacks." Vitamins can be added to "create a more
functional snackfood" and, lest it get too nutritious, sweeteners
and binding agents can also be mixed in. Catering to the needs of people
who wish to go both low-carb and low-fat, the mixture will offer at
least 70 percent of calories as protein with a carbohydrate content
of less than five percent. Containing both soy and wheat gluten, the
new product will be especially unhelpful to people with allergies and
celiac disease, both of which are now epidemic in this country. Soy
and wheat are among the top eight allergens, and gluten should be strictly
avoided by people suffering from celiac disease.
Soy Wimps Out
A study from Canada's McMaster University shows that milk protein is
significantly better than soy at building muscle mass. Researchers compared
the muscle gains of young men after completing heavy-weight lifting
workouts followed by consumption of equivalent amounts of protein in
the form of either skim milk or a soy beverage. "We were really
impressed by how much greater the gains in muscle protein with milk
were," says lead researcher Sarah Wilkinson. Seems the milk drinkers
gained almost twice as much muscle as the soy boys. Curiously, the researchers
are scratching their heads about why the milk worked out better. Could
it be that milk is a higher quality protein, if rated using the traditional
PER rating system? Or how about the fact that milk doesn't contain testosterone-reducing
phytoestrogens? Testosterone, after all, is the reason that men bulk
up more than women. It would be interesting to repeat these experiments
to test the muscle-building effects of raw milk compared to skim milk
and soy beverage.
REFERENCES
- Barrioneuva, Alexei. Honeybees, Gone With the Wind, Leave Crops
and Keepers in Peril, New York Times, February 27, 2007: http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10B1FF8355A0C748EDDAB0894DF40448
- Bee Vanishing Act Baffles Keepers, BBC News, Feb 27, 2007.
- The Case of the Vanishing Bees, CBS Evening News, Feb 13, 2007.
- Colony Collapse Disorder, Wikipedia. April 18, 2007. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder
- Armas, Genaro. Mysterious Ailment Killing Off Honeybees. Feb 14,
2007. Fox News. www.foxnews.com
- Across the U.S., Keepers Say Their Bees Are AWOL. Talk of the Nation,
March 9, 2007 National Public Radio, March 9, 2007. www.npr.org.
- Bee sickness investigated in California. February 14, 2007. USA
Today. www.usatoday.com
- Bee Vanishing Act Baffles Keepers, BBC News, February 27, 2007.
- Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group. Preliminary Report. http://maarec.cas.psu.edu/pressreleases/FallDwindleUpdate0107.pdf
- Wikipedia
- Bee mites suppress bee immunity, open door for viruses and bacteria.
May 18, 2005. (Adapted from a press release from Penn State) www.sciencedaily.com
- Levy, Sharon. The Vanishing. OnEarth, Natural Resources Defense
Council, Summer, 2006.
- Wikipedia
- Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
- Winter, Michael. Are Cell Phones killing off honey bee?. USA Today,
April 16, 2007. www.usatoday.com
- Lean, Geoffrey and Harriet Shawcross. Are mobile phones wiping out
our bees? Independent, April 15, 2007. http://independent.co.uk
- Sierra Club Genetic Engineering Committee. Laurel Hopwood, Chair.
Letter to Senator Thomas Harkin. Published in GE and bee Colony Collapse
Disorder – science needed! Environmental Update, Sierra Club,
www.sierraclub.org/biotech/whatsnew/whatsnew_2007-03-21.asp. This
letter is referenced with 11 journal citations.
- Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
- Latsch, Gunther. Collapsing Colonies: Are GM Crops Killing Bees?
March 22, 2007. Spiegel Online http: www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,473166.00.html.
- Ibid.
- Colony Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
- Ibid.
- Bee mites suppress bee immunity, open door for viruses and bacteria.
May 18, 2005. (Story adapted from a press release from Penn State)
www.sciencedaily.com
- Stevens, Charlie. Your bees are what you feed them. www.honeybee.com.au.
- www.honeybeeworld.com
- Farris, SM, Robinson GE et al. Larval and pupal development of the
mushroom bodies in the honey bee, Apis mellifera. J Comp Neurol, 414
, 97-113.
- O'Dell TJ, Kandel EB, Grant SG. Long-term potentiation in the hippocampus
is blocked by tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Nature, 1991, 353, 6344,
558-560.
- Yakisch JS, Siden A et al. Early effects of protein kinase modulators
on DNA synthesis in rat cerebral cortex. Exp Neurol, 1999, 159, 1,
164-176.
- Lephart ED et al. Phytoestrogens decrease brain calcium-binding
proteins but do not alter hypothalamic androgen metabolizing enzymes
in adult male rats. Brain Res, 2000, 17, 859, 1, 123-131.
- File SE, Hartley DE et al. Soya phytoestrogens changes cortical
and hippocampal expressions of BDNE mRNA in male rats. Neurosci Lett,
2003, 338, 2, 135-138.
- Daniel, KT. The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America's Favorite
Health Food (New Trends, 2005) 128.
- Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
About the Author
Kaayla
T. Daniel, PhD, CCN, earned her Ph.D. in Nutritional Sciences and Anti-Aging
Therapies from the Union Institute and University in Cincinnati and is board-certified
as a clinical nutritionist (CCN) by the International and American Association
of Clinical Nutritionists in Dallas. She is the author of The Whole Soy
Story: The Dark Side of America's Favorite Health Food published in March
2005 by New Trends Publishing. She designs diet, supplement and lifestyle plans
for private clients and is a dynamic speaker and seminar leader who challenges
and entertains her audiences with leading-edge information on clinically proven
ways to prevent and reverse disease and attain optimum health and maximum longevity.
For more information, answers to frequently asked questions or to contact Dr.
Daniel, visit her two websites www.wholesoystory.com
and www.soyfreesolutions.com.
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