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Honey bee deaths prompt Ontario to bring in experts on possible pesticide link

File - View of a bee queen in a honeycomb frmae at an apiary in an island of the Parana delta, near Ibicuy, Entre Rios, Argentina, some 170 km north-east of Buenos Aires on April 16, 2013. JUAN MABROMATA/AFP/Getty Images

TORONTO – All the buzz about dead bees is prompting Ontario to seek help from a group of experts.

A bee health working group is being formed to make recommendations on how to mitigate the potential risk of a certain pesticide to honey bees, the governing Liberals said Tuesday.

The pesticide – neonicotinoid – is used for corn and soybeans.

The group will comprise beekeepers, farmers, people in agri-business and scientists as well as staff from federal and provincial agencies. It will meet this month and provide recommendations by next spring, the government said.

Neonicotinoid pesticides have been banned by the European Union, which has been experiencing the same bee mortality problem, Sierra Club Canada said in a release.

“This working group is the first real recognition of the impact of neonicotinoid pesticides on bees,” executive director John Bennett said in the release.

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According to the Canadian Honey Council, the bee population in Canada has dropped by an estimated 35 per cent in the past three years.

Many fear that the decline will have a severe impact on the pollination of many plants and the global food supply.

Pollination is responsible for 70 per cent of cultivated plants, and for 35 per cent of humans’ overall food consumption. Fewer bees means lower yields – notably apples, strawberries and cucumbers – and could ultimately mean a drop in the food supply.

But Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency has failed to act, Bennett said.

Sierra Club Canada asked federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq in April to ban the use of neonicotinoids in Canada, Bennett said. But she hasn’t responded.

The regulatory agency, which authorized neonicotinoid insecticides for commercialization in 2004, looked into the matter after bees’ increased mortality was reported in 2012.

“The information evaluated suggests that planting of corn seeds treated with the nitro guanidine insecticides clothianidin and/or thiamethoxam contributed to the majority of the bee mortalities that occurred in corn growing regions of Ontario and Quebec in spring 2012,” the report stated.

“The likely route of exposure was insecticide contaminated dust generated during the planting of treated corn seed.”

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Unusual weather conditions in the spring of 2012 were likely also a contributing factor, it said. It was warmer and drier than normal, as well as windy in April. Corn planting began early in Ontario and bees began to forage and increase hive populations.

“As well, dry windy conditions could have facilitated exposure to bees if dust travelled further afield than would normally be the case,” it said.

A spokesman for the ministry said Health Canada is monitoring the situation closely and doesn’t feel a broad suspension is warranted.

The Ontario Beekeepers’ Association said the province has experienced heavy losses of bee colonies this spring, which appear to be worse than last year.

“We must enact a ban before the next planting season,” association president Dan Davidson said in a statement. “Our industry simply cannot sustain these losses.”

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