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this is perhaps off topic, but they are actually being controlled via man made/natural selection. The most aggressive of the hives get destroyed, and the more passive evade detection, so the less aggressive tend to survive and pass those traits on. That being said, they are still without a doubt moving northward, and while originally it was thought they could not survive the cold of the north, they are able to cope with it in much the same way as european honeybees do, especially since they are a cross breed and continually crossbreed with existing european nests along the way.PLAYER57832 wrote:True, and sadly, they, too are moving up north here.Snorri1234 wrote:African Killer Bees won't. They are insane. They're quicker to attack, attack in greater numbers and chase you for longer.PLAYER57832 wrote: As for bees... if you leave them alone, they will leave you alone, really and truly.
I forgot about them. However, I have heard that even they are not quite as bad as some of the stories. That is, they can cause an adult a lot of pain, but are unlikely to kill anyone not allergic, at least if medical help is anywhere nearby. (Still, they are nasty, just not the deadly menace some reports would have us believe).
there was that one, and the one with micheal caine that was produced to be a serious blockbuster, but ended up as a comedy as people in the theaters started laughing at the scene where the kid saw the giant bee in his hospital room....presumably because they gave him lsd instead of morphine i guess.oddzy wrote:cockroaches, fire ants, mosquitos and africanized bees are all on the list of creatures i don't like. big river/sewer rats are nasty, too.
be very nice so that your karma doesn't have you reborn as any of those around me.
btw, does anyone else remember that cheesy scifi movie about the killer bees that ends up with a bee-covered volkswagon driving into the superdome with the a/c cranked on high?
possibly forever. The old theory was 1/4 mile, a guy tested it and gave up after a mile from boredom perhaps. Granted, he was walking slowly and suited, so I would think someone running might lose them quicker...or die of course.Snorri1234 wrote:African Killer Bees won't. They are insane. They're quicker to attack, attack in greater numbers and chase you for longer.PLAYER57832 wrote: As for bees... if you leave them alone, they will leave you alone, really and truly.
I was speaking of africanized bees, not regular honeybees, which you can essentially keep as a pet if you dont annoy it. In arizona most colonies of bees are now at least partly africanized, and they are mostly immune to colony collapse disorder, unlike the european honeybee which suffers from fungus, an australian bee virus, pesticides, and genetic engineering all at once.PLAYER57832 wrote:There are ants, then there are fire ants. Fire ants are not native, for one (which along puts them in a "pest" category). They are also very destructive, unlike most other ants.AAFitz wrote:I dont love the idea of them, but I fear their 2 dimensional threat much less than the 3 dimensional threat of bees, not to mention the speed factor. No doubt you would not be ffing with every africanized bee colony you came in contact with...or perhaps you would f with all of them, but all of them would probably just mean the one.
I truly wanted to make a statement about hate=fear, but as I "hate" bees, I simply cannot. But since Im nearly positive I could outrun ants, and possibly not bees...If I had to choose, Ill pick dealing with the ants every day.
Now...as ridiculous as it sounds, I have to kill no doubt millions of regular ants every year, but when I have the chance, I give them every chance I can. Its silly without a doubt, but I simply try not to kill anything unless I have to. I just dont see the point in it.
Even watching a little ant tells us a lot about our world. They simply will never, ever, ever give up. They fight for queen and country until the bitter end, and want to live above all else, but will give it all up in a moments notice for the better of their race.
We can only strive to have the backbone of an ant or a bee for that matter...or, many other animals in the world.
As for bees... if you leave them alone, they will leave you alone, really and truly. Also, realize that much of what you eat would not be around if it were not for bees, and that's not just the obvious fruits, etc. Cows eat clover that is polinated by bees, etc. There is a fungus that is threatening our entire countries' bee population, so I don't speak esoterically when I say we need to work harder to preserve bees.
No thank you.AAFitz wrote: Feel free to test which is worse on your own time, but Ill just say now...I told you so.
Well.. this is a pretty complex topic. The short answer is that those species you mentioned have wreaked a lot of havoc, though a lot of that was before we understood that such things matter.2dimes wrote:Sometimes it's good to introduce some plant or animal from elsewhere in many ways.
Cows, chickens, watermelon, grapes, chinese gooseberries, awesome! Dandylions, african bees, less awesome.
Isn't most of the food here something introduced from elsewhere. You'd be eating Bison (perhaps better than cow but that's another discussion.) and berries with a side of corn if there was not tonnes of things introduced to the enviroment of the Americas.
2dimes wrote:Sometimes it's good to introduce some plant or animal from elsewhere in many ways.
Cows, chickens, watermelon, grapes, chinese gooseberries, awesome! Dandylions, african bees, less awesome.
Isn't most of the food here something introduced from elsewhere. You'd be eating Bison (perhaps better than cow but that's another discussion.) and berries with a side of corn if there was not tonnes of things introduced to the enviroment of the Americas.
Actually i stole the quote. Trivia question of the month:2dimes wrote:One of the things that has completely changed most of your country is something I had heard was here before just not in the volumes it is now, the corn. The US&A used to be plains and prarie, a substantial portion is now corn. bk barunt says you can't get the toothpaste back in the tube. Some people say now that the place has been tilled it can't return to what it was. Guess we wait for the asteroid huh?
The barge stops about twice as far from me as the orchards, so yeah...
I'll second his slick willy.2dimes wrote:I'm going to guess slick Willy.
With corn, you have even a greater problem. Corn actually was grown over much of this country, but now just about every ear of corn in our country comes from the same basic stock. One disease could easily wipe it all out.2dimes wrote:One of the things that has completely changed most of your country is something I had heard was here before just not in the volumes it is now, the corn. The US&A used to be plains and prarie, a substantial portion is now corn.
Actually, in this case you can buy seeds from some of the companies that specialize in this. I love just looking at the pictures. I have a catalogue from Baker Creek, for example. It has 117 pages full of pictures. They have 34 types of cucumbers, 47 types of eggplant, similar counts of other common vegetables, plus all kinds of stuff I almost gaurantee you have never heard of (nipple fruit anyone?).2dimes wrote: bk barunt says you can't get the toothpaste back in the tube. Some people say now that the place has been tilled it can't return to what it was. Guess we wait for the asteroid huh?
You can buy native grass seed, but the space to recreate vast Prairies no longer exist. Also, I don't know that all the seeds are available.2dimes wrote:You can buy seeds to un-til the ground and return it to native grass land that was never touched by a plough?
Thank you, Lionz.2dimes wrote: The link leads to young earth creationist's propaganda. Maybe.
was it good for you?2dimes wrote:Oh oh, you're onto me.
It doesn't quite work that way. The native grassland prairies "were" an ecosystem of their own with thousands of varieties of plants which were dominated by several types of grasses. These grasses have root systems that extend as deep as thirty feet into the ground making them drought resistant, fire resistant and even buffalo resistant in the days where millions of buffalo roamed North America.2dimes wrote:You can buy seeds to un-til the ground and return it to native grass land that was never touched by a plough?
Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.