Another good book "
Fruitless Fall: The Collapse of the Honey Bee and the Coming Agricultural Crisis
" has arrived at
Cartoosh's Economy Bookstore for your summer reading. Below is the book review for your convenience.
From Publishers Weekly
With a passion that gives this exploration of colony collapse disorder real buzz, Jacobsen (
A Geography of Oysters)
investigates why 30 billion honeybees—one-quarter of the northern
hemisphere's population—vanished by the spring of 2007. He identifies
the convergence of culprits—blood-sucking mites, pesticide buildup,
viral infections, overused antibiotics, urbanization and climate
change—that have led to habitat loss and the destruction of the
beautiful mathematics of the hive. Honeybees are undergoing something
akin to a nervous breakdown; they aren't pollinating crops as
effectively, and production of commercial American honey, already
undercut by cheap Chinese imports, is dwindling, even as beekeepers
truck stressed honeybees cross-country to pollinate the fields of
desperate farmers. Jacobsen pessimistically predicts that our
breakfasts will become... a lot more expensive as the supply of citrus
fruits, berries and nuts will inevitably decrease, though he expresses
faith that more resilient bees can eventually emerge, perhaps as North
American honeybees are crossbred with sturdier Russian queen bees. The
author, now tending his own hives, invests solid investigative
journalism with a poet's voice to craft a fact-heavy book that soars.
(Sept.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.