Sad Story of how an insecticide meant for Zika mosquitoes killed millions of bees in South Carolina

The Monday morning scene at Juanita Stanley’s apiary in Summerville, S.C., was ghastly and stunningly quiet: Everywhere one looked were clumps of honeybees, dead after a dousing on Sunday with the potent pesticide with which the local authorities had intended to kill mosquitoes.

“There was no need for a bee suit Monday morning to go down there, because there was no activity. It was silent,” Ms. Stanley said on Thursday. “Honestly, I just fell to the ground. I was crying, and I couldn’t quit crying, and I was throwing up.”

For Ms. Stanley and her business, the death toll easily exceeds two million bees, and Dorchester County officials are still tabulating how many more might have been killed when a day of aerial spraying, scheduled to combat mosquitoes that could be carrying viruses like Zika, went awry. The apparently inadvertent extermination, the county administrator said, happened after a county employee failed to notify Ms. Stanley’s business, which the administrator said should have been alerted about the spraying strategy. Some hobbyists were also caught by surprise.

Read it all.

print

Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Economics, Politics, * General Interest, * South Carolina, Animals, City Government, Ethics / Moral Theology, Health & Medicine, Politics in General, Science & Technology, Theology

One comment on “Sad Story of how an insecticide meant for Zika mosquitoes killed millions of bees in South Carolina

  1. Jim the Puritan says:

    Wow, this was a huge and sad disaster. I think I would have started crying and throwing up too if that had happened to me.