The Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Food prices could rise even more unless the mysterious decline in honey bees is solved, farmers and businessmen told U.S. lawmakers Thursday.
"No bees, no crops," North Carolina grower Robert Edwards told a House Agriculture subcommittee. Edwards said he had to cut his cucumber acreage in half because of the lack of bees available to rent.
About three-quarters of flowering plants rely on birds, bees and other pollinators to help them reproduce. Bee pollination is responsible for $15 billion annually in crop value in the U.S.
In 2006, beekeepers began reporting losing 30 per cent to 90 per cent of their hives.
This phenomenon has become known as Colony Collapse Disorder.
Scientists don't know how many bees have died; beekeepers have lost 36 per cent of their managed colonies this year.
It was 31 per cent for 2007, said Edward Knipling, administrator of the Agriculture Department's Agricultural Research Service.
"If there are no bees, there is no way for our nation's farmers to continue to grow the high quality, nutritious foods our country relies on," said Democratic Representative Dennis Cardoza of California.
Cardoza, chairman of the horticulture and organic agriculture panel, said "this is a crisis we cannot afford to ignore."
Food prices have gone up 83 per cent in three years, according to the World Bank.
Edward Flanagan, who raises blueberries in Milbridge, Maine, said he could be forced to increase prices tenfold or go out of business without the beekeeping industry.
"Every one of those berries owes its existence to the crazy, neurotic dancing of a honey bee from flower to flower," he said.
The cause behind the disorder remains unknown.
Possible explanations include pesticides; a new parasite or pathogen; and the combination of immune-suppressing stresses such as poor nutrition, limited or contaminated water and the need to move bees long distances for pollination.
Ice cream maker Haagen-Dazs and natural personal care products company Burt's Bees have pledged money for research and begun efforts to help save the bees.
The problem affects about 40 per cent of Haagen-Dazs' 73 flavours, including banana split and chocolate peanut butter, because ingredients such as almonds, cherries and strawberries rely on honey bees for pollination.
Katty Pien, brand director for Haagen-Dazs, said those ingredients could become too scarce or expensive if bees keep dying.
It could force the company to discontinue some of its most popular flavours, Pien said.
Haagen-Dazs has developed a new limited-time flavour, vanilla honey bee, and will use some of the proceeds for research on the disorder.
Burt's Bees has introduced Colony Collapse Disorder Lip Balm to "soften your lips while saving honeybees."
*The Associated Press
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