Hoping to fight off "colony collapse disorder," the mysterious affliction that has devastated honeybee colonies, some British scientists want to get bees to start washing their feet—but with the intention of getting them dirty, not clean. A team of University of Warwick researchers led by Dave Chandler believes that parasitic Varroa mites might be behind the honeybee's decline; the mites can feed on young or old bees, and their presence usually spells doom for the entire colony. Varroas develop resistance to chemical pesticides, too, so the scientists turned to a more natural threat—fungi. Having found four kinds of fungi that kill Varroa mites but don't seem to bother bees, the researchers want to put foot baths full of the fungi at the entrances to beehives. Bees are touchy-feely insects constantly passing food and pheromones, Chandler says, so they'd quickly pass the fungus around their colony, unwittingly protecting themselves against the ...
The Possible Solution to Disappearing Bees: Foot Baths
Explore how scientists combat colony collapse disorder using fungi that kill Varroa mites for protecting honeybee colonies.
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