Tag bees

Buggin’

One of my clients is an artist and she has been working on a series of bronze plaques that have engravings of various insects on them. On one of my recent visits to her, she showed me a book she had been looking at by an artist named Cornelia Hesse-Honegger, who has made hundreds of drawings of insects mutated by radiation in places like Chernobyl and other sites in Europe that were affected by that disaster. Earlier this week, coincidentally enough, Wired had a post about Hesse-Honegger that features a great slideshow of some of her excellent drawings. You can read more about her work here.

Last year, there were lots of reports about the huge losses of bee populations in the U.S. due to what is called “colony collapse disorder”. Sadly, things are only getting worse for bee keepers, as the latest survey shows that a full one-third of all managed bee colonies in the United States died over the winter, but only about 5% due to colony collapse disorder. Most of the die-off is being attributed to weather-related starvation and harsh conditions. You know, that “giant conspiracy of government and industry” called global climate change.

Last week, the NY Times had a story about the rise of Roundup-resistant weeds on farms that used Monsanto’s Roundup-resistant GM soybeans, and now there is this story from the Manchester (UK) Guardian about the emergence of huge insect infestations in China, where farmers have been using Monsanto’s GM varieties of cotton. On one hand, this ought to shut up all the people who continue to insist that evolution is “just a theory”, but on the other hand didn’t everybody SAY this was what would happen with GM crops about, oh, a BAJILLION TIMES?!?!

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OW!

stinging.jpg

My child is terrified of bugs. Doesn’t matter what kind of bug — ants, flies, mosquitoes, midges, or those creepy hairy-legged things in the corner of the bathtub — she freaks out if she so much as THINKS one is in her vicinity. The other day, on the way home from day camp, a fairly large moth got in the car as we were getting in, and I could not get it to fly back out when I opened my window. No matter how many times I told Charlotte that the moth wouldn’t hurt her, she shrieked every time it flew into the backseat area as though she were being attacked by Mothra.

After the moth finally got sucked out the window, we had a long talk about the harmlessness of moths and butterflies as compared to bees and mosquitoes, but I don’t think it will really change anything. This morning she came screaming to me about a bee in her room, which turned out to be a dead midge blown from the window fan onto her bed. Oh, well.

So I am not ever telling her about this website, which ranks the relative painfulness of insect bites and stings and which puts the very common paper wasps and honeybees right near the top. On the upside, though, I don’t see any moth species listed.

Comments:
Not that ‘C’ would like this, but I saw the COOLEST thing on the way to work this morning.

Two small finches were by the side of the road. As I stopped at the stop sign, I was watching them flying up from the ground erratically and then back down and then another finch would dart out from the house across the street and do this odd flying pattern. When i got closer I realised they were trying to cherry pick this moth right out of the air and you know how erratically moths and butterflies fly? It was hilarious. I wonder who won in the end.
Posted by jo [URL] on 07/12/07

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