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Shells

Beach Comber
Mar 16, 2010
48
2
Be careful of dead bees on beach at Spooky Lane. I accidentally stepped on one and got stung. They are near the waterline.
 

jodiFL

Beach Fanatic
Jul 28, 2007
2,476
733
SOWAL,FL
They are starving since the hurricane. All the flowers they feed on have been blown away. Someone told me that they have been putting out plates of water.sugar and honey to help them survive.
 

Kurt

Admin
Staff member
Oct 15, 2004
2,234
4,926
SoWal
mooncreek.com
Save The Bees: Panhandle Beekeepers Struggling After Hurricane Michael

Hurricane Michael left a devastated Panhandle to pick up the pieces. Industries like timber and agriculture are struggling to rebuild. And another community is asking for help: beekeepers.

“We have about 500 beekeepers who call this area home," said University of Florida professor of entomology Jamie Ellis. "They manage somewhere in the neighborhood of about 50,000 colonies. That’s over 1.2 billion honeybees.”

Ellis said panhandle beekeepers range from small hobbyists to large commercial operations. And after Hurricane Michael, many are worried about the future of their bees.

“When the storm went through, there was obvious direct destruction to some of their colonies," said Ellis. "But there was also quite a lot of damage done to the foraging sources these bees use. The plants, the trees, etc., were blown down and destroyed.”

These food sources are what bees need to survive.

The panhandle is home to a special and highly coveted form of honey: Tupelo honey. But without bees, there’s no honey. But honey isn't the only product at risk.

“A lot of these bees are used in the pollination industry where they provide pollination services to the state's and other states’ blueberries, cucumbers, watermelons, cantaloupes, almonds and other things,” explained Ellis.

The Florida State Beekeepers Association has set up a GoFundMe to raise money. And they’re asking experienced beekeepers to help maintain colonies in the affected area.

“So when the hurricane went through it’s done a lot of damage to the beekeeping industry in this area," said Ellis. "Which is why need to get the word out to find beekeepers help and do what we can to save the bees.”
 

Kurt

Admin
Staff member
Oct 15, 2004
2,234
4,926
SoWal
mooncreek.com
HUNGRY BEES: Sugar shipment arrives for bees affected by hurricane

GreaterGood.org partnered with the Florida State Beekeepers Association and the Florida State Department of Agriculture to help more than 1 billion starving bees and avoid an ecological disaster left in the wake of Hurricane Michael by donating over a quarter million pounds of sugar syrup.

A tanker containing 4,500 gallons of sugar syrup was delivered to Wewahitcha on Monday. The delivery is one of seven taking place by the Rescue Bank across the Panhandle.

This temporary alternative food source will serve up to 50,000 bee colonies to avoid them from collapsing and permanently wreaking havoc on the country’s citrus supply.

“Hurricane Michael is the strongest storm to ever hit the Florida Panhandle, and there is a true emergency for the state’s bee population that has a potentially devastating long-term impact,” said Liz Baker, executive director of GreaterGood.org. “Losing this bee population would create a major ripple effect on U.S. agriculture, and we knew we needed to act quickly to make this emergency donation happen.”

Emergency supplies of sugar syrup will keep bee colonies sustained while bee forage material regrows, which is estimated to take at least a month.
 
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