This is not cool. I have a bee colony that has formed outside my house under the eaves of the roof and I thought I could get rid of it using my cell phone. I've racked up $100s worth in overage bills and now I learn that it's not going to work? I think the newspapers should pay my phone bill.
This is not cool. I have a bee colony that has formed outside my house under the eaves of the roof and I thought I could get rid of it using my cell phone. I've racked up $100s worth in overage bills and now I learn that it's not going to work? I think the newspapers should pay my phone bill.
Haven't had time to read it yet, but here's a link to the actual study, which probably doesn't reach the conclusions in the news reports.
http://www.kokopelli.asso.fr/documentation/favre.pdf
Interesting, thx, although to be honest I have a hard time putting much stock behind someone who goes by "bug girl."Bug girl at skepchick seems to have the analysis I was looking for.
First, pardon on the link. Here it is corrected (at least this one worked for me) along with a related CNN one (since many JREF people think Fox is evil)
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011...-mysterious-worldwide-bee-deaths-study-finds/
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-06-30/...ations-cell-phone-radiation-ofcom?_s=PM:WORLD
Second, thanks to those of you who are actually interested in discussing it vs the pseudo-intellectuals who automatically dismiss the possibilities without giving it any consideration. How scientific.
Haven't had time to read it yet, but here's a link to the actual study, which probably doesn't reach the conclusions in the news reports.
http://www.kokopelli.asso.fr/documentation/favre.pdf
Of course not. It's rather like the giving rats umpteen times the normal amount of (whatever) which gave them cancer and then concluding that (whatever) causes cancer in people.There is also the back of envelope calculation to see if you're even in the right ballpark. The India test placed cellphones IN THE HIVE, where they are not normally found and is in NO WAY TYPICAL of exposure patterns.
...weak to US. And perhaps the insane explosion in their use combined is what might be screwing up the bees, at least to some extent. It's not like there's anywhere near enough info either way to say definitively.Cellphone radio emissions are no different from any other radio signal (and they are extremely weak at any distance from the phone,
...weak to US. And perhaps the insane explosion in their use combined is what might be screwing up the bees, at least to some extent. It's not like there's anywhere near enough info either way to say definitively.
And it's not simply about the hive. Last I checked most bees spent a hell of a lot of time outside the hive - where they often can't help but be exposed to the massive increase in radio emissions.
It may be all much ado about nothing, but IMO it's worth a look at least.
Take your word for it, I'm too lazy to check that out.Yes there is. We can start with the fact that the insane explosion in cell phone use happened well before the fall of 2006, which is when the colony collapse epidemic began;
? I didn't say anything about radiation but rather cell phones in general, whatever the cause.the fact that there's not one iota of evidence to suggest that bees are susceptible to, affected by, or capable of detecting cell phone radiation,
Then why are people bringing up the "oh that only happened when they attached a phone to the bee hive, that's not realistic!" - ?Strictly speaking, the bees would be exposed to the radio emissions just as strongly inside their hives as outside of them.
Having been looked at before and other possible causes for CCD do not themselves dictate dismissing this possible cause, esp when some studies have shown a link to disrupting bee behavior to one degree or other.It's been looked at, repeatedly. More often even than other, more intuitive (and likely) causes such as actual pests and pesticides that we know for a fact are at least theoretically capable of affecting bees.
? I didn't say anything about radiation but rather cell phones in general, whatever the cause.
Then why are people bringing up the "oh that only happened when they attached a phone to the bee hive, that's not realistic!" - ?
Having been looked at before and other possible causes for CCD do not themselves dictate dismissing this possible cause, esp when some studies have shown a link to disrupting bee behavior to one degree or other.
Clarification: when you say "radiation" I presume you mean ionizing radiation.How else would cell phones that aren't near beehives have an effect on them? Presumably it's the signals they're transmitting.
? You just said "the bees would be exposed to the radio emissions just as strongly inside their hives as outside of them." Now they're "exponentially more concentrated?"Because by locating a transmitter actually inside the beehive, the experiment exposes the bees to exponentially more concentrated RF emissions (inverse square law, etc) than they encounter normally in their hives or flying in the open

...or perhaps we should say "have been proven (yet)."And it's worth noting that even under such conditions, it takes the bees nearly an hour to even begin to show agitation, and no lasting effects are observed.
Clarification: when you say "radiation" I presume you mean ionizing radiation.
? You just said "the bees would be exposed to the radio emissions just as strongly inside their hives as outside of them." Now they're "exponentially more concentrated?"![]()