Forest Study Shows Human Action Not The Only Cause Of Bee Population Loss
Picture shows a Bumble Bee in Bighorn National Forest, Wyoming undated. A study aimed at determining the state of bee and butterfly populations over a period of 15 years in the southeastern United States, investigated the driving forces behind the decline of insect populations. (oleen Roberts-USDA Forest Service/NewsX/Bee)

Forest Study Shows Human Action Not The Only Cause Of Bee Population Loss

Continue ReadingForest Study Shows Human Action Not The Only Cause Of Bee Population Loss
Bee Species Decline ‘Has Serious implications For Human Nutrition’
Picture shows Prof Christina Grozinger from Pennsylvania State University, undated. Prof Grozinger has co-authored studies concerning pesticides, the nutritional ecology of honeybees and the attractiveness plants are having on pollinators. (NewsX/Bee)

Bee Species Decline ‘Has Serious implications For Human Nutrition’

Continue ReadingBee Species Decline ‘Has Serious implications For Human Nutrition’
Pressurising Pollinators Blamed For Human Excess Death Hike
Picture shows Dr Samuel Myers, a principal research scientist at Havard's department of environmental health and the senior author of the study, undated. Insufficient pollination has been linked to more than 400,000 annual excess deaths by scientists at a renowned university in the United States. (NewsX/Bee)

Pressurising Pollinators Blamed For Human Excess Death Hike

Continue ReadingPressurising Pollinators Blamed For Human Excess Death Hike
Bee Venom Study Hints Breast Cancer Treatment Prospect
The venom of wild bees such as the violet carpenter bee (Xylocopa violacea), with its main component melittin, is less aggressive than that of honey bees, a team from the LOEWE Center TBG discovered, undated photo. In the future, it could be used against breast cancer cells, among other things. (Björn M. von Reumont, NewsX/Bee)

Bee Venom Study Hints Breast Cancer Treatment Prospect

Continue ReadingBee Venom Study Hints Breast Cancer Treatment Prospect

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