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    Keeping The Bees: Why All Bees Are at Risk and What We Can Do to Save Them

    Keeping The Bees: Why All Bees Are at Risk and What We Can Do to Save Them

    by Laurence Packer


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      ISBN-13: 9781443400398
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Canada
    • Publication date: 09/21/2010
    • Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 288
    • File size: 3 MB

    Laurence Packer obtained a B.A. in zoology from the University of Oxford and a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. He has been at York University since 1988, where he is currently a professor of biology.

    Table of Contents

    1 Buzz Free: A World without bees: Stuck Under a Truck in the Atacama Desert, Chile 1

    2 The Future of our Food: Serenading the bees on Cape Breton Islands, Nova Scotia 17

    3 Honey, Queens, Hard-working Workers and Stings: Misconceptions About Bees: Stung by Bee Killers on the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom 35

    4 A Bee or Not a Bee? A Difficult Question to Answer: Insulting the Experts in Portal, Arizona 51

    5 Two Bees or Not two Bees? An even More Difficult Question to Answer: Uncovering Irregularities at the National History Museum, London 63

    6 It's a Bee's Life: Up Before Dawn in the Australian Outback 79

    7 The Sociable Bee: Digging Nests After Dark in Calgary, Alberta 101

    8 Sex and Death in Bees: Choosing a Mate in Subtropical Florida 117

    9 Where the Bee Sucks, There Hunt I: Painful Bee Sampling in the Tehuacan Desert, Mexico 131

    10 Anti-Bees: Sexually Transmitted Child-eating Female Impersonators on a California Sand Dune 157

    11 What are we Doing to the Bees?: Bee-Free Day in Germany 173

    12 The Proverbial Canaries in the Coal Mine: Upsetting Ornithologists in Rome 195

    13 Help the Bees: Dodging Hippos at the African Pollinator Summit 211

    Epilogue: Bee Worship on the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico 223

    Acknowledgments 229

    Appendix 1 Bee Families 233

    Appendix 2 Bee Names 235

    Sources 241

    Index 263

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    A world without bees would be much less colourful, with fewer plants and flowers. But that's not all -- food would be in much shorter supply, and available in much less variety. While the media focuses on colony-collapse disorder and the threats to honey bees specifically, the real danger is much greater: all bees are at risk. And because of the integral role these insects play in the ecology of our planet, we may be at risk as well.

    The life of Laurence Packer, a melittologist at Toronto's York University, revolves around bees, whether he's searching for them under leaves in a South American jungle or identifying new species in the desert heat of Arizona. Packer often finds himself in exotic and even dangerous locales, risking snake bites, sunstroke, and even the ire of other scientists. Everywhere he travels, he discovers the same unsettling trend: bees are disappearing. And since bees are responsible for up to one-third of our food supply, the consequences are frightening.

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