Eye of the swarm: experts take sting out of urban beekeeping By Tori Otten Washington (AFP) Aug 17, 2019 When others flee in terror, they head into danger. They are the Swarm Squad, Washington's best, last and only line of defense against a rise in swarms blamed in part on urban beekeeping. With populations in decline across the planet, environmentalists are especially worried about the fate of the honeybee, an insect that pollinates 70 out of the top 100 human food crops. But as city dwellers flock to join the growing urban apiary movement, installing hives on their rooftops and in gardens, Washington has been coping with the opposite problem. "A swarm of bees... really looks like a biblical event," said 53-year-old Del Voss, one of about 100 amateur beekeepers in Washington. "It can really be terrifying for somebody." In 1947, there were about six million US honeybee hives but the figure dropped to 2.4 million in the following 60 years, thanks to pesticides, habitat destruction and other manmade threats, as well as parasitic mites. Apiarists have been leading the fightback, but the relocation of populations into cities has turned swarms from a strictly rural phenomenom into an alarming urban problem. - 'Rock stars' - Hives typically house up to 70,000 bees. But healthy communities can grow too big, forcing half of the insects to fly off -- known as "swarming" -- in search of a place to build a new hive. When any of the dozens of members of Washington's Swarm Squad get the call, they suit up in protective clothing, grab boxes and buckets, and head to the threat. Anyone tempted to deal with a swarm in a wall cavity at home should know that it's not as simple as spraying it with pesticide. "If you did kill them, all that honey and wax is going to melt down and seep through your walls," said Billy Mullinax, a patent researcher and member of the Swarm Squad, part of the DC Beekeepers Alliance non-profit. "So you're still going to have to cut the wall out and get all that crap out anyway." Jan Day, a friend of Voss's, says she started keeping bees five years ago, and made sure to educate her neighbors. When her own hives finally swarmed, not only did her neighbors not panic, they were "psyched." "Now they say, 'I make sure to plant pollinator-friendly plants for your bees!'" she told AFP. Urban beekeeping was only widely legalized in Washington in 2012, and now there are more than 400 hives at private homes, the National Arboretum and at the city's Franciscan monastery. "In the beginning, beekeepers were rock stars and eccentrics," said Toni Burnham, the president of the DC Beekeepers Alliance. "Now, they're just your neighbors."
Ancient pigs endured a complete genomic turnover after they arrived in Europe Oxford UK (SPX) Aug 15, 2019 New research led by Oxford University and Queen Mary University of London has resolved a pig paradox. Archaeological evidence has shown that pigs were domesticated in the Near East and as such, modern pigs should resemble Near Eastern wild boar. They do not. Instead, the genetic signatures of modern European domestic pigs resemble European wild boar. Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the study shows how this has happened. Working with more than 100 collaborators, resear ... read more
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