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Honungsbins framtid
#1


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Honungsbin framtid är hotad totalt tack vare ett virus framkallad i Israel(onda staten) som heter IAPV(Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus) http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_Acute_Paralysis_Virus
Och den här viruset är orsaken till massmord på miljontals bin runt världen http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder

Det här är akut eftersom bin kan försvinna totalt i framtiden tack vare dem onda människors girighet då snackar jag om männen med agenda i NWO , globalism och minskning av population. Ett kontroll världs samhälle helt enkelt!

Vi behöver bin för dom är oerhört viktig för våran natur och grönska .Vi behöver bin för dom pollinerar våran grönsaker ,blommor och all havre som vi verkligen behöver till våran kost och det är tack vare bin som gör att våran mat är nyttig och bra eftersom deras pollinering är nödvändig till all blommor och grönska.
Utan bin så kan vi räkna med katastrof och just katastrof är vad "dom" vill just för o förvandla oss till själlösa nwo zombies(vilket vi är nu)
Nu när man har läst mycket om dom här ämnena så är bilden helt klart och tydligt vad ondskan vill göra mot oss människor, naturen och moderjord . Om vi fortsätter blunda för det här så blir framtiden ett jävla helvete för våran barn och barnbarn.

Posted on: 2009/7/10 7:33
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#2


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De senaste årens rapporter om kollaps av bisamhällen kan bero på elektromagnetisk strålning.

Mycket tyder på det, det finns studier och artiklar kring det, hinner inte leta fram det nu.

Posted on: 2009/7/10 11:38
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Anonym
Re: Honungsbins framtid
#3
Einstein sade att om bina försvann hade människan bara fyra år kvar.

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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#4


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Kan det inte bero på chemtrails? Det har säkert många orsaker, har själv märkt att det knappt syns till några bin länge.

Posted on: 2009/7/13 8:23
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#5


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Såg ni denna debattartikel igår av Peter Wahlbeck i AB?:

Fåglar och träd dör av mobilstrålningen
http://www.aftonbladet.se/debatt/article5496551.ab

Jag kommer inte ihåg om jag tipsat om denna tidigare:

Mikrovågor - hot mot både sparv och människa
http://www.epochtimes.se/articles/2009/06/27/17374.html

Posted on: 2009/7/13 9:48
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#6


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Jag ser att Robert nu har lagt ut om träd som är sjuka/dör i Varberg på grund av strålning.
Så undrar en del som har dect, trådlöst, mobil, grannar som har det så det går genom väggarna, och kanske mobilmaster utanför... varför de mår dåligt...

http://www.mobilsmog.se/2009/08/nu-do ... -kyrkan-och-pa-andra.html

Posted on: 2009/8/24 12:16
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Anonym
Re: Honungsbins framtid
#7
Quote:

arkman skrev:
Jag ser att Robert nu har lagt ut om träd som är sjuka/dör i Varberg på grund av strålning.
Så undrar en del som har dect, trådlöst, mobil, grannar som har det så det går genom väggarna, och kanske mobilmaster utanför... varför de mår dåligt...

http://www.mobilsmog.se/2009/08/nu-do ... -kyrkan-och-pa-andra.html


Mobilsmog.se = mycket bra sida.

Det här med elektromagnetisk strålning...Har varit inne på Post- och Telestyrelsens hemsida ett antal gånger men har fortfarande svårt att förstå hur man kan sätta upp en mobilmast vid varje gathörn (http://e-tjanster.pts.se/Map/).

Om man söker på sin hemadress upptäcker man (troligen) att man bor nära en eller flera master. Åh neej tänker man, bäst att flytta...

Men sedan kommer ännu ett slag i ansiktet. Vart skall man flytta - det finns ju master i princip överallt?

Ut på landet kanske om man kan kombinera med jobb. Eller?

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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#8


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Jag talade med en biodlare nyligen som sa att bidöden beror på bekämpningsmedel som innehåller nikotin vilka används inom växtodling. Det kan få olika konsekvenser som att bina inte hittar hem eller att de får skador på vingarna. Han var även engagerad i biodlarföreningen.

Posted on: 2009/8/24 21:26
Sanningen skall göra oss fria!
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#9


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Parsifal, olika personer säger och kanske fastnar vid just det som de råkat komma över av info...

Här om bin och elektromagnetisk strålning:

#664: DECT and bee decline
Saturday March 03rd 2007, 7:47 am
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc
From Alfonso Balmori
In a recent study carried out with bees in Germany, only few irradiated bees (with DECT) returned to the beehive and required more time to reach the hive. The weight of honeycombs is also smaller in the bees that were irradiated

Stever H, Kuhn J, Otten C, Wunder B, Harst W. Verhaltensanderung unter elektromagnetischer Exposition.Pilotstudie. Institut fu¨ r mathematik. Arbeitsgruppe. Bildungsinformatik. Universita¨t Koblenz-Landau; 2005. http://agbi.uni-landau.de/materialien.htm

See also

www.mikrowellensmog.info/bienen.html web from Dr. Ferdinand Ruzicka, Doz University.

and

http://canterbury.cyberplace.org.nz/ouruhia/

and

Firstenberg, A. 1997: Microwaving Our Planet: The Environmental Impact of the Wireless Revolution. Cellular Phone Taskforce. Brooklyn, NY 11210.

With best regards

Alfonso Balmori. Spain
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=665

_____



Science News Article
Honey Bee Crisis extends from US to Britain and Netherlands
http://vegetablegardens.suite101.com/ ... .cfm/science_news_article
© Sally Morton

Sep 28, 2006

Science News: A study by Jacobus Biesmeijer and William Kunin (Leeds University), showing declines in pollinators and insect-pollinated plants in Britain and Netherlands.

In July of 2006, an article appeared in La Monde, entitled, “The Number and Variety of Pollinating Insects in Europe Are Diminishing Significantly.” It was written by Christiane Galus. Rating hardly a blip on the radar of the international mainstream news, this article passed through the maze of media sources without notice by most of the world’s inhabitants. Since I was following the Honey Bee Crisis in the US as well, I paid attention.

Here is an excerpt:

“A study conducted by Jacobus Biesmeijer and William Kunin (Leeds University, United Kingdom) and a team of British, German, and Dutch researchers and published in the July 21 issue of Science confirms that the threat is serious. By studying different areas of Great Britain and the Netherlands, scientists observed that wild bees have paid the heaviest toll, with a 52% reduction in their diversity with respect to their situation in 1980 in Great Britain and a 67% reduction in the Netherlands…”

Now, those are two disturbing sentences, and it prompted me to go search current science news and read the scientific study cited. In conducting the investigatory scientific study, the team of scientists considered more than one million data points. Here is an excerpt from the abstract:

“…we found evidence of declines (pre-versus-post-1980) in local bee diversity in both countries… pollinator declines were most frequent in habitat and flower specialists, in univoltine species, and/or in nonmigrants. In conjunction with this evidence, outcrossing plant species that are reliant on the declining pollinators have themselves declined relative to other plant species. Taken together, these findings strongly suggest a causal connection…”

See “Parallel Declines in Pollinators and Insect-Pollinated Plants in Britain and the Netherlands” (Science, 21 July 2006: Vol. 313. no. 5785, pp. 351 – 354).

You may listen to the Science Podcast, ”Pollination in Trouble,” an Interview with Dr. William “Bill” Kunin, University of Leeds, a co-author of the study.

A transcript excerpt from the interview:

“…there were not only fewer species, there were different species, and that’s part of what raised concern…they tended to be losing habitat specialists, diet specialists, all the sort of specialist bees and hover flies, and the generalists were increasing. And then…we started looking at plants…we were surprised to see a pretty strong pattern of decline in the vast majority of the insect-pollinated plants…while the wind-pollinated plants and the self-pollinated plants were either stable or increasing…”

When asked, “How worried should we be about this?” Dr. Kunin said it did not imply a global pollinator crisis, however:

“…It’s the first time anyone’s looked for national-scale declines in pollinators and in both the countries we looked for it, it was there…I’d be surprised if there aren’t some similar patterns elsewhere, but again, people have to go look for them.”

One can only hope that similar studies will immediately commence in the US, Canada, and other countries.

http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=664

____




#662: Species under threat: Honey, who shrunk the bee population?
Friday March 02nd 2007, 8:38 am
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc
The story on the mysterious die-off of honey bees is in today’s media. Here’s an article in The Independent (UK) Sent in by Andy Davidson:
Species under threat: Honey, who shrunk the bee population?

Across America, millions of honey bees are abandoning their hives and flying off to die, leaving beekeepers facing ruin and US agriculture under threat. And to date, no one knows why.

Michael McCarthy reports

THE INDEPENDENT
Published: 01 March 2007
It has echoes of a murder mystery in polite society. There could hardly be a more sedate and unruffled world than beekeeping, but the beekeepers of the United States have suddenly encountered affliction, calamity and death on a massive scale. And they have not got a clue why it is happening.

Across the country, from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific, honey bee colonies have started to die off, abruptly and decisively. Millions of bees are abandoning their hives and flying off to die (they cannot survive as a colony without the queen, who is always left behind).

Some beekeepers, especially those with big portable apiaries, or bee farms, which are used for large-scale pollination of fruit and vegetable crops, are facing commercial ruin - and there is a growing threat that America’s agriculture may be struck a mortal blow by the loss of the pollinators. Yet scientists investigating the problem have no idea what is causing it.

The phenomenon is recent, dating back to autumn, when beekeepers along the east coast of the US started to notice the die-offs. It was given the name of fall dwindle disease, but now it has been renamed to reflect better its dramatic nature, and is known as colony collapse disorder.

It is swift in its effect. Over the course of a week the majority of the bees in an affected colony will flee the hive and disappear, going off to die elsewhere. The few remaining insects are then found to be enormously diseased - they have a “tremendous pathogen load”, the scientists say. But why? No one yet knows.

The condition has been recorded in at least 24 states. It is having a major effect on the mobile apiaries which are transported across the US to pollinate large-scale crops, such as oranges in Florida or almonds in California. Some have lost up to 90 per cent of their bees.

A reliable estimate of the true extent of the problem will not be possible for another month or so, until winter comes to an end and the hibernating bee colonies in the northern American states wake up. But scientists are very worried, not least because, as there is no obvious cause for the disease as yet, there is no way of tackling it.

“We are extremely alarmed,” said Diana Cox-Foster, the professor of Entomology at Penn States University and one of the leading members of a specially convened colony-collapse disorder working group.

“It is one of the most alarming insect diseases ever to hit the US and it has the potential to devastate the US beekeeping industry. In some ways it may be to the insect world what foot-and-mouth disease was to livestock in England.”

Most of the pollination for more than 90 commercial crops grown throughout the United States is provided byApis mellifera, the honey bee, and the value from the pollination to agricultural output in the country is estimated at $14.6bn (£8bn) annually. Growers rent about 1.5 million colonies each year to pollinate crops - a colony usually being the group of bees in a hive.

California’s almond crop, which is the biggest in the world, stretching over more than half a million acres over the state’s central valley, now draws more than half of the mobile bee colonies in America at pollinating time - which is now. Some big commercial beekeeping operations which have been hit hard by the current disease have had to import millions of bees from Australia to enable the almond trees to be pollinated.

Some of these mobile apiaries have been losing 60 or 70 per cent of their insects, or even more. “A honey producer in Pennsylvania doing local pollination, Larry Curtis, has gone from 1,000 bee colonies to fewer than eight,” said Professor Cox-Foster. The disease showed a completely new set of symptoms, “which does not seem to match anything in the literature”, said the entomologist.

One was that the bees left the hive and flew away to die elsewhere, over about a week. Another was that the few bees left inside the hive were carrying “a tremendous number of pathogens” - virtually every known bee virus could be detected in the insects, she said, and some bees were carrying five or six viruses at a time, as well as fungal infections. Because of this it was assumed that the bees’ immune systems were being suppressed in some way.

Professor Cox-Foster went on: “And another unusual symptom that we’re are seeing, which makes this very different, is that normally when a bee colony gets weak and its numbers are decreasing, other neighbouring bees will come and steal the resources - they will take away the honey and the pollen.

“Other insects like to take advantage too, such as the wax moth or the hive beetle. But none of this is happening. These insects are not coming in.

“This suggests that there is something toxic in the colony itself which is repelling them.”

The scientists involved in the working group were surveying the dead colonies but did not think the cause of the deaths was anything brought in by beekeepers, such as pesticides, she said.

Another of the researchers studying the collapses, Dennis van Engelsdorp, a bee specialist with the State of Pennsylvania, said it was still difficult to gauge their full extent. It was possible that the bees were fleeing the colonies because they sensed they themselves were diseased or affected in some way, he said. This behaviour has been recorded in other social insects, such as ants.

The introduction of the parasitic bee mite Varroa in 1987 and the invasion of the Africanised honey bee in 1990 have threatened honey bee colonies in the US and in other parts of the world, but although serious, they were easily comprehensible; colony collapse disorder is a deep mystery.

One theory is that the bees may be suffering from stress as beekeepers increasingly transport them around the country, the hives stacked on top of each other on the backs of trucks, to carry out pollination contracts in orchard after orchard, in different states.

Tens of billions of bees are now involved in this “migratory” pollination. An operator might go from pollinating oranges in Florida, to apples in Pennsylvania, to blueberries in Maine, then back to Massachusetts to pollinate cranberries.

The business is so big that pollination is replacing honey-making as the main money earner at the top end of the beekeeping market, not least because in recent years the US has been flooded with cheap honey imports, mainly from Argentina and China.

A typical bee colony, which might be anything from 15,000 to 30,000 bees, would be rented out to a fruit grower for about $135 - a price that is up from $55 only three years ago. To keep the bees’ energy up while they are pollinating, beekeepers feed them protein supplements and syrup carried around in large tanks.

It is in these migratory colonies where the biggest losses have been seen. But the stress theory is as much speculation as anything else. At the moment, the disappearance of America’s bees is as big a mystery as the disappearance of London’s sparrows.

http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=663

___




#661:The Emerging Global Pattern of Insect Pollinator Decline
Thursday March 01st 2007, 10:19 pm
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc
In December 2006 a paper by Olle Johansson, “How Shall we Cope With the Increasing Amounts of AIrborne Radiation?” was published in the print Journal of the Australasian College of Nutritional & Environmental Medicine (www.acnem.org). This paper examines an increase in illness in the population of Sweden and the increasing background level of microwave radiation as a result of new wireless technology. To quote in part from the paper:

“We found a very close correlation between the growth in sickness, sick-leave and other similar parameters and the expansion of the new GSM 1800 mobile telephone system. The interesting point was that the rise in sickness in Sweden considered county by county increased rapidly during the period October 1997 to January 1998. Long periods of sick leave, depression, attempted suicides, percentages of persons on sick leave (especially in large concerns), industrial accidents, etc., all increased. We could see that this negative development coincided in time with the development of the new telephone system and that ther study county by county showed a correlation with the mean strength of the mobile radiation.”
So if a human population can be adversely affected by the introduction of a new microwave wave form in the environment is there a possibility that some other creatures may be affected as well? Consider the case of the decline of the honey bee. Perhaps their antennas are increasingly picking up confusing signals….

After you read the following article consider the importance of research that urgently needs to be done but unfortunately who would ever dare fund such ‘controversial’ research?

Don

*************************************

The Honey Bee Crisis of 2007
Escalating Honey Bee Decline Baffles Scientists
© Sally Morton

http://vegetablegardens.suite101.com/ ... _honey_bee_crisis_of_2007

Feb 17, 2007

The honey bee crisis in the United States has been escalating for several years, rising to “unprecedented” levels of honey bee losses between Oct 2006 and Feb 2007.

The honey bee crisis of 2005, which was blamed on the Varoa mite, decimated as much as 50% of honey bee populations in the US, but was weathered, overcome, and quickly passed out of most people’s vocabulary. I wrote an article about it for Suite 101, which you can read here. In it, I gave a fruit, vegetable, nut and wild plant list dependent upon insect pollination.

Approximately 80% of all insect pollination is accomplished by honey bees. According to the University of California at Davis publication “Don’t Underestimate the Value of Honey Bees,” the remaining 20% of other insect pollinators are drastically reduced in number as well, making one wonder if the problem is the varoa mite or something else affecting the broader insect world.

Honey Bee Pollination plays major role in Global Food Supply

The year 2006 passed seemingly without incident relating to honey bees and I breathed a sigh of relief. Why is it worrisome when bees die by the thousands? Three words: global food supply. The lowly honey bee is required for the pollination of a wide range of plants, affecting everything from clover (think cows) to fruits to vegetable seeds. Honey bee-pollinated crops represent more than $15 billion annually to the economy. That does not even take into consideration indirectly affected items, such as beef, milk, cheese, wild animals, or birds.

Fall of 2006 Reveals Decimated Bee Colonies

The problem is that 2006 did not pass without incident—it passed without media-reported incident. It was in the fall of 2006 when a distressed Pennsylvania beekeeper, Dave Hackenberg, reported to researchers at Pennsylvania State University that he had lost about 2,000 hives. To give you an idea of how many bees that is—each hive contains around 50,000 bees in summer. The mysterious bee ailment was dubbed “Colony Collapse Disorder.”

The last three months of 2006, beekeepers up and down the East Coast of the US were quietly reporting large bee losses. Alarm bells were ringing in the “beekeeper world.” By January of 2007, it had spread beyond the Eastern US and Western states were also reporting bee losses. As beekeepers in colder regions start reporting their bee colony status in spring, the figures are expected to rise even higher.

Escalating Bee Decline for More than a Decade

This week, I’ve learned that the honey bee crisis in the U.S. is back and its worse than ever. Or did it ever really leave? Two types of parasitic mites invaded the US—tracheal mites in 1984 and varroa mites in 1987. Bee populations have been steadily declining ever since.

2007 Honey Bee Crisis “Unprecedented”

In February of 2007, I read the first mainstream media article I’d seen on this year’s bee crisis, which said that beekeepers from 22 states so far have reported decimation of hives by as much as 80%, varying in degree of severity.

As I set out to find more information from leading authorities in the industry, I decided the best people to ask were the bee experts at the American Bee Federation. When I first clicked on their website’s homepage, I was greeted with this quote from a January 2007 Penn State press release:

“An alarming die-off of honey bees has beekeepers fighting for commercial survival and crop growers wondering whether bees will be available to pollinate their crops this spring and summer…” The losses were called “unprecedented” by Penn State Agriculture Extension Associate, Mary Ann Frazier.
Cause of Colony Collapse Disorder Eludes Investigators

Although the honey bee crisis of 2005 was attributed to the varoa mite, the 2006-2007 malady is of unknown origin. Researchers have been unable to isolate a common cause. While they have found numerous disease organisms present in dying bee populations, along with a few common management issues, the common link affecting all the populations continues to elude investigators. Dennis vanEngelsdorp, acting state apiarist with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture said, “Preliminary work has identified several likely factors that could be causing or contributing to CCD. Among them are mites and associated diseases, some unknown pathogenic disease and pesticide contamination or poisoning.”

University and federal researchers, state regulatory officials, cooperative extension educators, and industry representatives have joined together to research the current bee crisis. The beekeeping industry, including the American Beekeeping Federation, The Foundation for the Preservation of Honey Bees, and the National Honey Board are all actively engaged in the effort.

The Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium (MAAREC) is “a regional effort to address the pest management crisis facing the beekeeping industry in the Mid-Atlantic Region.” According to MAAREC, its mandate is: “Exploring the cause or causes of honey bee colony collapse and finding appropriate strategies to reduce colony loss in the future.”

Emerging Global Pattern of Insect Pollinator Decline

It’s hard for many to imagine how something as small and pesky as a honey bee could play such an important role in global food supply, but it does. Since the decline of insect pollinators fits into an emerging global pattern of insect pollinator decline, shouldn’t the current US honey bee crisis be investigated from a wider world view?
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=662

__

Nyare, bl a om pesticider som orsak:

http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=948
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?s=honey&submit=GO

----

\\\"Will Some Device Save The Bees from Bee-Colony Collapse Disorder?\\\"
Does this radiation, which is emitted from the mobile phone masts and between microwave relay stations and to which many residents are also exposed, also pose a danger to animals? Siegfried Vogel from the Selbitz area of Hüttung believes the radiation emitted from the multitude of surrounding mobile phone masts is responsible for the loss of his four bee colonies during the past year.Mr. Vogel is not alone in his assessment. The loss of birds has also been suspected as being caused by the mobile phone radiation. Recently, there have been numerous reports on the Internet concerning the impairment and loss of bees and messenger pigeons. The authors of these articles are attributing this loss to mobile phone mast radiation. The loss of birds is also spurring fears that the whole of nature may be at risk due to the ever-increasing electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones and the like.
http://www.laleva.org/eng/2007/04/pro ... obile_phone_radiation.htm
http://prd34.blogspot.com/2007/07/emf ... ee-yahoogroups-links.html

___

____________________________________

Det under från http://prd34.blogspot.com/2007/07/emf ... ee-yahoogroups-links.html

Cell phone tower radiation may be killing plants and animals

--
Are Electromagnetic Waves the Culprit
A Warning From Deformed Plants
Se bilder:
http://www.japanfocus.org/-Kato-Yasuko/1568
---

Animal Study EMF Radiation
Photos of animal deformities caused by microwaves
http://members.aol.com/gotemf/emf/animals.htm

---

Cell Phones
Experts investigating biological effects of cell phone radiation
http://www.laleva.cc/environment/cellphones.html

Cell phone tower radiation may be killing plants and animals
Ever wondered where the butterflies, some insects and birds like sparrows have vanished? Well, your constantly ringing cell phones could be responsible for this.A study conducted by three departments of Panjab University has found that cell phone towers are the dominating source of electromagnetic radiations in environment in the city and this could lead to diseases in plants and animals.
http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=226423

http://prd34.blogspot.com/2007/07/emf ... ee-yahoogroups-links.html

___________


Sandu K. (2007). \\\"Cell phone tower radiation may be killing plants and animals.\\\" Ludhihana Newsline. http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=226423
http://www.buergerwelle.de/pdf/do_you ... ness5%5B4%5Dfootnotes.rtf

Posted on: 2009/8/24 22:26
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#10


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Såg ni ovan tex det som Olle Johansson sa?

\\\"#661:The Emerging Global Pattern of Insect Pollinator Decline
Thursday March 01st 2007, 10:19 pm
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc
In December 2006 a paper by Olle Johansson...\\\"

Kom att tänka på sparvar... - jag har i ett inlägg tidigare tipsat om en artikel på Epoch Times om det - jag har för mig att jag ser aldrig sparvar här på torget i Varberg, apropå de döende träden på torget som Robert skrev om på sin blogg.

Jag kollade idag på torget, därfinns träd, gräsmattor, buskar, utefik etc... borde det inte vara sparvar där... var det inte sparvar förr kring uteserveringar o dyl... men inte en sparv, bara kajor och måsar.

Det är larmat om att sparvarna till stor del försvinner från England städer, i samma takt som miljöerna/stadskärnor hamnar under strålningstryckseländet. So tex i City of London (del av London), där är nog bara reptilenergi... + master...

Jag kan ge länkar senare.

Någon som har någon fundering eller observation just kring att sparvar skulle ha försvunnit, därman förr såg dom?

Posted on: 2009/8/25 16:16
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#11


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Det har precis kommit en rapport som beställdes av det österrikiska försäkringsbolaget AUVA.

Läser man överst nu på Roberts blogg (http://www.mobilsmog.se) så skriver han om det.
Det är mycket bra och alarmerande information i den vetenskapliga rapporten, den är väldigt viktig och är något som folket \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"måste få\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\" veta.
Där står conclusions från rapporten:
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"...so it is not a question of insufficient evidence anymore. This is now about the conflict between commercial interests of an industry supported by the government and the protection of public health.

The BUND warns:
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"The ubiquitous exposure to this unnatural type of radiation at unprecedented levels of power density harms human health. Short-term and long-term health impairments are reprogrammed and will especially manifest in the next generation if politically responsible actions are not taken immediately.\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"

......

Det är sedan länge varnat om att sparvarna har försvunnit från Englands städer/stadskärnor, som City of London - detta har skett i samma takt som master har satts dit.

Study begins into disappearance of house sparrow from London
Utusan Express, 19 June 2002
This spring, scientists could find just four of the birds in Kensington Gardens, although other bird species continue to thrive there. The birds have disappeared from other sites including St. James Park, Hyde Park and Buckingham Palace, where they used to nest in the gates.
http://www.jphpk.gov.my/Malay/formaduan/English/June02%2019A.htm

Mobile phones blamed for sparrow deaths | UK news | The Observer
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2003/jan/12/science.highereducation

Why there are no House Sparrows in London\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'s Royal Parks
http://www.sparrowsneedhedges.com/why_no_royal_park_sparrows.html

The secret life of sparrows
The complete disappearance of mankind\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'s oldest feathered friend from the centre of many British cities is a modern mystery.
nejdå..
...the rapid and virtually total disappearance of central London\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'s sparrows - they seem to have started going in about 1990 and were gone by the Millennium - is a true mystery, one of the most puzzling enigmas in nature for very many years.
mainstreammedia/science...
http://www.independent.co.uk/environm ... e-of-sparrows-410252.html


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#661:The Emerging Global Pattern of Insect Pollinator Decline
Thursday March 01st 2007, 10:19 pm
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc

In December 2006 a paper by Olle Johansson, \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"How Shall we Cope With the Increasing Amounts of AIrborne Radiation?\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\" was published in the print Journal of the Australasian College of Nutritional & Environmental Medicine (www.acnem.org). This paper examines an increase in illness in the population of Sweden and the increasing background level of microwave radiation as a result of new wireless technology. To quote in part from the paper:

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"We found a very close correlation between the growth in sickness, sick-leave and other similar parameters and the expansion of the new GSM 1800 mobile telephone system. The interesting point was that the rise in sickness in Sweden considered county by county increased rapidly during the period October 1997 to January 1998. Long periods of sick leave, depression, attempted suicides, percentages of persons on sick leave (especially in large concerns), industrial accidents, etc., all increased. We could see that this negative development coincided in time with the development of the new telephone system and that ther study county by county showed a correlation with the mean strength of the mobile radiation.\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"
So if a human population can be adversely affected by the introduction of a new microwave wave form in the environment is there a possibility that some other creatures may be affected as well? Consider the case of the decline of the honey bee. Perhaps their antennas are increasingly picking up confusing signals..


After you read the following article consider the importance of research that urgently needs to be done but unfortunately who would ever dare fund such \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'controversial\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\' research?
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=662

........

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"Will Some Device Save The Bees from Bee-Colony Collapse Disorder?\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"

Does this radiation, which is emitted from the mobile phone masts and between microwave relay stations and to which many residents are also exposed, also pose a danger to animals? Siegfried Vogel from the Selbitz area of Hüttung believes the radiation emitted from the multitude of surrounding mobile phone masts is responsible for the loss of his four bee colonies during the past year.Mr. Vogel is not alone in his assessment. The loss of birds has also been suspected as being caused by the mobile phone radiation. Recently, there have been numerous reports on the Internet concerning the impairment and loss of bees and messenger pigeons. The authors of these articles are attributing this loss to mobile phone mast radiation. The loss of birds is also spurring fears that the whole of nature may be at risk due to the ever-increasing electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones and the like.
http://www.laleva.org/eng/2007/04/pro ... bile_phone_radiation.html

.....

#664: DECT and bee decline
Saturday March 03rd 2007, 7:47 am
Filed under: Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), etc
From Alfonso Balmori
In a recent study carried out with bees in Germany, only few irradiated bees (with DECT) returned to the beehive and required more time to reach the hive. The weight of honeycombs is also smaller in the bees that were irradiated...
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=665

....

Are Electromagnetic Waves the Culprit
A Warning From Deformed Plants
Se bilder:
http://www.japanfocus.org/-Kato-Yasuko/1568
---

Animal Study EMF Radiation
Photos of animal deformities caused by microwaves
http://members.aol.com/gotemf/emf/animals.htm

---


Cell phone tower radiation may be killing plants and animals

Ever wondered where the butterflies, some insects and birds like sparrows have vanished? Well, your constantly ringing cell phones could be responsible for this.A study conducted by three departments of Panjab University has found that cell phone towers are the dominating source of electromagnetic radiations in environment in the city and this could lead to diseases in plants and animals.
http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=226423
....

Honey Bee Crisis extends from US to Britain and Netherlands
http://www.emfacts.com/weblog/?p=664

-------------------

Cell phones
Experts investigating biological effects of cell phone radiation
asked to shut up or quit jobs
http://www.laleva.cc/environment/cellphones.html

Posted on: 2009/8/27 10:23
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#12


See User information
Hej Arkman och ni andra

http://www.vanishingbees.com/index.html

Jag är själv biodlare och har för tillfället två samhällen. Vi biodlare, där jag bor, diskuterar ofta vad CCD beror på, vi har själva inga större problem med det, men å andra sidan så har mobilnätet och 3G masterna just etablerats i vår region. De första teorierna var GMO, men jag med flera lutar allt mer åt magnetisk strålning på grund av masterna. En sak vet jag dock säkert, om vi inte lyckas vända trenden så ligger vi riktigt risigt till.
Jag vill därför uppmana Vaken läsare till två saker, ett gå med i en biodlarförening och börja odla bin och två returnera mobiltelefonen till företaget som tillverkat den. För att ge ett perspektiv på biodling, jag och den yngsta killen i föreningen har en sammanlagd ålder som överinstämmer med genomsnittsåldern i föreningen och ingen av oss är under trettio.
Vi kan inte förvänta oss mängder av surrande bin om det inte finns någon som odlar dem. Vad det gäller massdöden så verkar det ännu så länge drabba U.S.A. och de stora industrialiserade nationerna i Europa. Kanske spelar det roll att vi är relativt glest bebyggda i det här landet fortfarande.

Lev väl

9-2

Posted on: 2009/8/27 20:33
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Re: Honungsbins framtid
#13


See User information
Ny artikel:

Mobiltelefon ökar risken för hjärntumör
http://www.epochtimes.se/articles/2009/08/27/17713.html

Posted on: 2009/8/27 22:18
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