25K
Dead Bumblebees Fall From Trees in Oregon
21
June, 2013
A
Wilsonville, Oregon, Target parking lot has seen what
could be the
biggest-recorded mass bumblebee die-off in the Western US. The 25,000
deaths were first noticed on Saturday, as bees tumbled from 55 linden
trees in bloom, the Oregonian reports.
"They were literally falling out of the trees," a biologist
tells the Portland
Tribune;
he calculated that some 150 colonies likely met their end. Adds an
agriculture official: "I've never encountered anything quite
like it in 30 years in the business."
Pesticides—particularly
a neonicotinoid called Safari that may have been sprayed by a
landscape company on the trees on Saturday—could be to blame,
though test results might not be in until the weekend. A Safari
product label apparently warns that it's "highly toxic" for
bees and shouldn't be used when they're around. Officials are now
putting bee-blocking nets over the trees to halt the deaths,
the Oregonian reports. Honeybee
deaths have
been widely reported, but bumblebees have
also been in decline, the paper notes. "Bumblebees are the
single most important natural pollinator in Oregon," says a
conservation advocate. Interestingly, it's
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