A new pesticide is all the buzz
Enlarge (credit: Kim Mitchell; USFWS)
Bees' fuzzy yellow bodies and hairy legs are custom-built for picking up pollen. Nothing can distribute the yellow powder more efficiently-something farmers that shell out for commercial beehives every growing season know all too well. And starting with this fall's growing season, bees may be given some cargo to carry on their outbound journey to the blossoms: pesticides.
On August 28, the EPA approved the first-ever bee-distributed organic pesticide for the US market-a fungus-fighting powder called Vectorite that contains the spores of a naturally occurring fungus called Clonostachys rosea(CR-7). CR-7 is completely harmless to its host plant and acts as a hostile competitor to other, less innocuous fungi. It has been approved for commercial growers of flowering crops like blueberries, strawberries, almonds, and tomatoes.
The beauty of Vectorite is that it mimics a "locally appropriate natural system," said Vicki Wojcik, director of Pollinator Partnership Canada. "It's an interesting twist" where care for the health of the pollinator is actually vital because it is your actual vector."
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