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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/environment/flora-fauna/Mobile-towers-th\

reatening-honey-bees-in-Kerala-Study-/articleshow/4955476.cms

 

Mobile towers threatening honey bees in Kerala: Study

PTI 31 August 2009, 06:56pm IST

 

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Mobile towers are posing a threat to honey bees in Kerala

with electromagnetic radiation from mobile towers and cell phones having the

potential to kill worker bees that go out to collect nectar from flowers, says a

study.

 

A plunge in beehive population has been reported from different parts of Kerala

and if measures are not taken to check mushrooming of mobile powers, bees could

be wiped out from Kerala within a decade, environmentalist and Reader in

Zoology, Dr Sainudeen Pattazhy says in his study.

 

In one of his experiments he found that when a mobile phone was kept near a

beehive it resulted in collapse of the colony in five to 10 days, with the

worker bees failing to return home, leaving the hives with just queens, eggs and

hive-bound immature bees.

 

Electromagnetic waves emitted by towers were strong enough to cripple the

" navigational skills " of the worker bees, who play a vital role in sustaining

bee colonies, Pattazhy, who teaches in S N College at Punalur in Kollam district

said.

 

A few months ago, a study conducted by a team of environmentalists led by

Pattazhy in different spots in Kollam district in Kerala, found that radiation

from mobile towers also threatened the very existence of home sparrow, which

live in colonies close to human habitats even in urban areas.

 

Parackal Chacko, a bee keeper from Wayanad, said it was true that there has been

mass destruction of bee hives in the area but it was thought to be due to

climatic shifts and attack by hostile insects and pests. " The angle that mobile

towers could be a source of threat should be probed, " he said.

 

Pattazhy, however, said though it required detailed study, it could reasonably

be understood that insects and smaller animals were " easily penetrated " by

microwaves radiated by mobile towers and phones. He claimed to have seen changes

in the behavioural pattern of bees when they make hives close to mobile towers.

 

Besides helping farmers earn an additional income through honey and bee-wax,

honeybees do great service in pollinating flowers and plants, a vital process

that sustains vegetation.

 

In a colony of an average size, there are about 20,000 to 31,000 bees comprising

a queen and a few hundred drones. But 90 per cent of the population is made up

of workers.

 

Recently a sharp decline has been noticed in commercial bee population in

Kerala. The official explanation has been that this happens as bees are

susceptible to diseases and fall prey to attacks by wasps, ants, and wax moth

and that constant vigilance on the part of the bee keepers can check it.

 

The farmers have also complained that introduction of exotic varieties of bees

to promote apiculture have also done harm as they are unsuitable to climatic

conditions of the area.

 

Also, bees and other insects have survived and evolved complex immune system

over a span of millions of years. " Considering this, it is vital to ponder as to

why they suddenly die out. Naturally, the question would point to human-made

factors, Pattazhy said.

 

The vanished bees are never found. Bee keepers said several hives have been

abruptly abandoned.

 

If towers and mobile phones further increase, honeybees might even be wiped out

in 10 years due to bio active radiation, causing significant alternation in the

physiological function of living organisms.

 

" The need of the hour is to check unscientific proliferation of mobile towers

and promote more studies and come out with practical solutions " , Pattazhy added.

 

In Kerala there are about six lakh bee hives and 1 to 1.25 lakh people are

engaged in apiculture, mostly as an allied activity. A single hive can yield

four to five kg of honey.

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