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Managed Pollinator CAP: Coordinated Agricultural Project

Last Updated: March 04, 2010

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Image:CAPfeature.jpgLearn about some of the latest research into bee decline.




Research Updates from the Managed Pollinator CAP: Coordinated Agricultural Project

Table of Contents:

  1. Managed Pollinator CAP: Introduction, Dr. Keith S. Delaplane, University of Georgia: Nov. 2009
  2. When Varroacides Interact, Dr. Reed Johnson, University of Nebraska - Lincoln: Dec. 2009
  3. Detect Nosema Parasite in Time to Save Bee Colonies, Dr. Katherine Aronstein, Research Molecular Biologist, USDA/ARS, Honey Bee Research Unit, Weslaco, Texas: Jan 2010
  4. Sustainable Beekeeping, Dr. Nancy Ostiguy, Penn State University: Feb 2010
  5. Honey Bee Medical Records: The Stationary Apiary Monitoring Project, Dr. Marla Spivak, University of Minnesota: Mar. 2010
  6. Nosema ceranae, Dr. Tom Webster, Kentucky State University: Apr 2010

Managed Pollinator CAP Web-Page: www.beeccdcap.uga.edu

Awareness of the decline of honey bees and other pollinators took a dramatic upturn after two recent events: the October 2006 release of the National Research Council report “Status of Pollinators in North America” followed by high death rates of bee colonies in the winters of 2006-2008, a phenomenon now called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). All at once, managed pollinators were popularly recognized for what they always were: essential members of American agro-ecosystems.

The problems with managed pollinators cannot be relegated to one or few causative agents. Bee declines are likely a product of negatively interacting factors in pathology, immunology, nutrition, toxicology, genetics, ecosystems management, and bee husbandry. In response, we have assembled a nationally-coordinated team of experts with proven capacity in extension, genomics, pathology, toxicology, management, pollination, and bee behavior. Our long-term goal is to restore large and diverse populations of managed bee pollinators across the United States to sustain natural and agricultural plant communities.

Dr. Keith S. Delaplane
University of Georgia
Department of Entomology


More information about the Managed Pollinator CAP can be found at their web-page at www.beeccdcap.uga.edu


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