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For a good few years I've been hearing about how pollenators and in particular bee populations bees are suffering, and the apparent mystery behind it, a bit like the Bermuda Triangle.
Well, I went on a walk with friends over the Easter bank holiday and at one point it was alongside a big field of bright yellow oilseed rape. Initially someone said "oh, there's a dead bee" and then someone else said it. Then, when I actually looked down at the ground as I was walking there was a dead bee of differing types/species every few feet, amongst a few other insects but it was mainly bees, all along the side of this field of oilseed rape for a hundred metres or so. Didn't see any other dead bees apart from next to this field.
Now, we're encouraged not to draw conclusions from one-off personal experiences, but to me
it was pretty apparent that something that had probably been put on the field, i.e. pesticide, that was killing these insects.
So next time I hear a news article about the apparent mystery of what is happening to bees I'll think back to this experience.
Well, I went on a walk with friends over the Easter bank holiday and at one point it was alongside a big field of bright yellow oilseed rape. Initially someone said "oh, there's a dead bee" and then someone else said it. Then, when I actually looked down at the ground as I was walking there was a dead bee of differing types/species every few feet, amongst a few other insects but it was mainly bees, all along the side of this field of oilseed rape for a hundred metres or so. Didn't see any other dead bees apart from next to this field.
Now, we're encouraged not to draw conclusions from one-off personal experiences, but to me
it was pretty apparent that something that had probably been put on the field, i.e. pesticide, that was killing these insects.
So next time I hear a news article about the apparent mystery of what is happening to bees I'll think back to this experience.