The Bee-ginning of the End: Rhetorical Analysis Paper 1 When I first read through Nathanael Johnson’s article discussing the fall of bee populations in relation to a catastrophic unearthly demise, I kept an open mind. With my personal opinion about the bee crisis stifled, I read on to see if Johnson could aptly convince me of his argument. Unsurprisingly, he failed. In “Why the bee crisis isn’t as bad as you think (but still matters)”, Johnson attempts to convince his audience that the bee crisis of this decade is not only blown out of proportion, it has happened before and will most likely happen again. Johnson mainly utilizes previous crises to illustrate his point, pulling numbers and dates stretching as far back as the late 1860s. It
Scientists are alarmed and baffled by the decline in bee populations around the United States and other parts of the world. Since 2004 the population keeps decreasing at alarming rates. Bee researches dubbed this new phenomenon Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD).
The article “Hivey Leaguers” discusses problems affecting the bee population in the United States ranging from chemicals and insecticides to Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). Colony Collapse Disorder occurs when the worker bees disappear from the hives, leaving behind the queen and the nurses to take care of the immature bees. This newly discovered threat to bee populations caused widespread panic in the entomologist community and lead to a race to find the cause, and the relative cure. Though this new disorder was a danger, the real bane of the bees was a much more sinister, and domestic, threat.
The colony collapse disorder has been threatening the United States for many years. Reports show excessive numbers of honeybees dying off. According to the Bee Informed Partnership and USDA’s annual survey, during the winter of 2013-2014, the mortality of managed honeybee colonies was 23.2. The previous winter’s report showed a loss of 30.5 percent of the colonies and thus, the winter 2013-2014 results might show some improvement. However, beekeepers persist that the still declining honeybee colonies are becoming too low for colony collapse disorder to be considered a solved issue. Approximately two-thirds of the beekeepers reported losses greater than the acceptable 18.9 percent mortality rate, thus deeming the losses greater than what is economically sustainable. The issue
This recent outbreak of widespread bee deaths is not the first depletion of bee colonies in recorded history, which makes the source of CCD less, rather than more
Seven years ago honeybee colonies were reported to be dying en masse. They were dying from multiple causes, and these bee disappearances reflect an infertile landscape and a dysfunctional food system. The problem is that in the last 50 years bees have been dying and we’re planting more crops that require bees pollination. Colony Collapse Disorder, Varroa mites, and our farming practices attribute to these disappearances of our most important pollinator, bees.
“Creating unique characters is something every fiction author has to focus on because it can make the difference in writing a book that resonates with the audience…” (“5 Tips for”). In this case, in Kidd’s novel, The Secret Life of Bees, the author implements literary devices, such as, indirect characterization, symbolism, and allusions, in her writing. Moreover, the literary devices applied generate reader’s feelings toward the characters.
The article represented the areas that were declining in wild bee population and what the causes were as well as why. This was an eye-opening article, the more people that read this article the better off the bees will be. The bees play a major part scientifically speaking and the decline will hurt more than just the agricultural state of the united states. The article could show more of what could be done to help ease the loss of the wild bees. Human life would not be able to be sustained as efficiently if we do not have the necessary pollinators around for the production of
From around the year 2006, many bee farmers in the U.S.A and some parts of Europe started reporting sharp declines in their bee stocks. The reason for this declining numbers was not known and therefore scientists named it colony collapse disorder (CCD). Colony collapse disorder (CCD) is a not a very old phenomena and it became popular when large number of bee colonies started disappearing. The disappearing was mysterious since no dead bees were found in or around the beehives after a colony’s number was reported to have gone down or vanished. This prompted a lot of study and investigations to uncover the mystery and to establish possible remedies. Among the many reasons for the causes of the CCD
The previous die-offs were again observed from 2006 onwards at a much larger scale. The alarming drop in the bee
Many people say that bees are accountable for one of every three bites of food we eat. In addition to plant pollination (crucial to crop growth), bees also provide people with many wax based products as well. Honeybees are singlehandedly one of the most important organisms in our ecosystem, however their efforts are often ignored. The bees are dying, and their mysterious disappearances are raising far less warning signs than needed. Colony collapse disorder has been an enormous concern for quite a while now, and it is only getting worse. Using multiple scholarly sources, the importance of CCD and bees will be brought to light throughout this paper. An introduction to the definition of colony collapse disorder will be looked at as an
Another event more recently was reported in Pennsylvania where Keepers reported a 53% loss of their hives. But what made this event most serious was the loss of 1/3rd of bee hives within the United States as a whole. This event appeared to have no particular rhyme or reason for this cause and no singular circumstance could be pointed to as an exact cause of such mass destruction of one species that is crucial to food production within the United States ("Honey Bees and Colony Collapse Disorder").
Bees are very important to humanity and the world we live in because they provide the most efficient way to pollinate plants. Without them, wildlife would be greatly impacted in negative ways. The purpose of this research paper is to bring awareness and insight into the declining population of bees, how detrimental it is,the way it affects humans and nature as a whole. If drastic measures are not taken in a timely manner it will not be beneficial for our society. In the world, there are about 25,000 different types of bee species with about 4,000 in North America which can be then subdivided into nine families of bees(One Green Planet, n.d.). Bees help contribute roughly two hundred and sixty-four billion dollars to the global economy.
Global Research of CA has found that just within the last five years, “30% of the national bee population has disappeared and nearly a third of all bee colonies in the U.S. have perished.” (Statistic, Global Research Of California)
There is no worse feeling than losing something important, and having no clue as to what has happened to it. This has occurred to many beekeepers around the country. They wake up overnight to find a large portion of their bees gone. Honeybee loss has been around for quite a while. Its reach extends as far as Europe and Asia. The amount of bees disappearing, gradually increased in number as the years went by. In fact, according to the ARS, 32% of honeybee colonies were lost in the winter of 2006 to 2007, and that is only a quarter of the year. If the rest of the year is taken into account the total loss is much greater. For example, in the year 2010-2011, 36.4% were lost, from the year 2011-2012, 28.9% were lost, in 2012-2013, 45%, and in 2013-2014, 34%(Kaplan). Although the percentage of loss is not consecutively increasing, and instead is creating almost a roller coaster of ups and downs, it is still a problem. In fact, the Bee Informed Partnership, a group of knowledgeable universities and research labs, reported that about 42.1% of honeybees, were
Honey bees, feared by the misinformed and admired by the intelligent, are dying. The interest in bees from many environmentalists is not for a sudden cause, as this issue is not new to the world. Honey bees as a population have been in decline for years but have yet to reach the endangered species list anywhere in the United States except for Hawaii. Many people kill bees that buzz around joyfully, simply because they are afraid of being stung by them; however, a vast majority of bees do not sting and the others do not care. This unfortunate commonality is not even one of the top causes of the worldwide epidemic of honey bees. Although bees are jokingly idolized on the internet in pictures and videos as a result of a popular children’s movie, their population decline is in fact quite serious. Honey bees and other pollinators like birds and insects ensure the pollination of flowering plants and crops all around the globe. Not only do honey bees pollinate plants that produce the foods that humans eat, but they also pollinate trees that produce clean oxygen for Earth. Without honey bees, the world as we know it could soon end, due to carbon dioxide pollution and lack of farmable foods. The population of honeybees and other important pollinator-bee species is dwindling due to a dilemma known to scientists as colony collapse disorder (CCD) because of the use of bee-killing pesticides, known as neonicotinoids, the decrease of flower meadows in the world, and the general increase