According to a report being published by the journal Science
the scientists discovered that a virus may be responsible for the Colony
Collapse Disorder, a puzzling phenomenon occurring in the United States.
The Colony Collapse Disorder, or simply put CCD, is a
disorder in bee colonies in which the most adult honeybees are abandoning a
hive and disappearing, leaving the queen and some younger bees.
Dead adult bees aren't found near the hive, they are just
gone.
The Colony Collapse Disorder was discovered late last year
after beekeepers from 35 US
stateshave reported losses of up to 80 percent of their colonies. About a
quarter of beekeeping operations were affected by CCD during the 2006-2007
winter alone. While colony losses are not unexpected during winter weather, the
magnitude of loss suffered by some beekeepers was highly unusual.
The US Department of
Agriculture said that the disease is a very serious issue and it may cause
somewhere around $75 billion of economic damage if left unchecked.
Also CCD may affect pollination which is a critical element
in agriculture, as honey bees pollinate more than 130 crops in the United States
and add $15 billion in crop value annually.
For example, in California,
the almond crop alone uses 1.3 million colonies of bees, approximately one half
of all honey bees in the United
States, and this need is projected to grow to
1.5 million colonies by 2010,, USDA said.
The new research, which is based on a comparison of healthy
and unhealthy bee colonies, points to a virus.
“Our extensive study suggests that the Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV) may
be a potential cause of Colony Collapse Disorder,” said W. Ian Lipkin, director
of the Center for Infection and Immunology at the Mailman School of Public
Health, Columbia University. “Our next step is to
ascertain whether this virus, alone or in concert with other factors such as
microbes, toxins and stressors, can induce CCD in healthy bees,” he added.
In order to find CCD’s possible cause, the researchers used
a a rapid genome sequencing technique called pyrosequencing to catalogue the
entire variety of microorganisms that honey bees harbor. After that, they
compared the sequences obtained in those held in public database in order to
identify symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria, fungi and viruses found in both
healthy and CCD-afflicted colonies.
In another test, they compared their samples with those
collected over three years across the United States from normal and
CCD-affected hives.
After these operations, they concluded that the molecular
signs of Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus appeared to be associated with CCD. But
they said further analysis is needed in order to determine if IAPV can induce
CCD in healthy bees.
"The next step is to ascertain whether IAPV, alone or
in concert with other factors, can induce CCD [colony collapse disorder] in
healthy bees," said Ian Lipkin, director of the Center for Infection and
Immunity at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. As the
researchers noted, IAPV is rarely found in healthy hives.
The experts from the US Department of Agriculture noted that
Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus is not the only factor responsible for CCD.
“This research gives us a very good lead to follow, but we
do not believe IAPV is acting alone,” said coauthor Jeffery S. Pettis, research
leader of the Bee Research Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture.
“Other stressors to the colony are likely involved,” he said
Earlier this year U.S. Department of Agriculture Under
Secretary for Research, Education and Economics Gale Buchanan announced that
USDA researchers have finalized a Research Action Plan plan for dealing with
colony collapse disorder (CCD) of honey bees.
According to the USDA’s report there are four possible
causes for CCD: new or reemerging pathogens, new bee pests or parasites, environmental
and/or nutritional stress, or pesticides.
Also USDA said that an initial budget for implementation of the
Research Action Plan would require $250,000, mostly for testing of bee samples
collected.
Other experts have also said that IAPV is not the only
factor responsible. “This may be a piece or a couple of pieces of the puzzle,
but I certainly don't think it is the whole thing," said Jerry Hayes,
chief of the apiary section of the Florida
department of agriculture, quoted by AP.
The imports of bee colonies from Australia
made to bolster US
bee population were considered as a potential source of the virus. Until 2004
importing bees was a practice that had been banned by the Honeybee Act of 1922,
but after U.S.
bees were devastated by the varroa mite, the ban was lifted. According to Pettis, U.S. officials are discussing to
reinstate the ban.
In response, the Australian scientists rejected the idea that the
Australian bees may carry the cause of CCD and they pointed out that there are
no reported cases of CCD in Australia.