BAHS has a bee hive!
A bee hive was recently installed on land adjacent to Bloomsburg University's upper campus. The bee hive, funded through a Bloomsburg University mini-grant to Drs. Surmacz and Hranitz, will support undergraduate and graduate research. Honey bees pollinate many
common crops and contribute an estimated $15 billion to the U.S. economy
annually. Global declines in honeybee
populations have been observed, with average losses of 30% of the hives each
year. Many of these losses have been attributed to Colony Collapse Disorder
(CCD). In CCD, the majority of the adult bees disappear from the colony,
leaving behind the brood and plenty of food. While no single cause has been
linked to CCD, leading suspects are nutritional stress, pathogens, and
pesticides. BAHS researchers studying cellular stress in honey bees include faculty members Drs. Brubaker, Hranitz and Surmacz, graduate students Heather Llewellyn and Justin Heller, and undergraduate students Taylor Bozza and Rachel Nenstiel. Graduate student Hannah Anderson has been maintaining the hive.