Truth or Consequences bee_movie1

Published on May 12th, 2011 | by Jeremy Bloom

9

Are cell phones killing bees? How the false meme spread.

bee movie

You may have seen the sensational stories on the Internet the past 24 hours that it’s finally been confirmed: Cell Phones KILL Bees!

The only problem is… it’s NOT confirmed.

That’s not what the study says. It’s not even what the original article says.

The study

Yes, cell phone radiation harms bees. A Swiss researcher placed cell phones next to hives and recorded what happened. When the phones were active, the bees emitted “piping” sounds – the high-pitched tones that spread the message through the colony that something disturbing is going on.

Piping can be a signal for the colony to swarm… but that didn’t happen here, and the researcher let the phones go as long as 20 hours. He did report that the colony didn’t return to baseline normal state for many hours after the phones were switched off and removed.

Nowhere in the report does it say anything about bees dying. So what happened?

The first story

The original article (pdf)  was accepted for the scientific journal Apidologie last year.

The story was picked up by the British tabloid The Daily Mail yesterday. That paper is known more for its sensationalism than its accuracy, and they don’t disappoint – the second sentence claims “In the first experiment of its kind, a bee expert placed a mobile phone underneath a hive and then carefully monitored the reaction of the workers.”, which is simply not true – there have been other experiments of this type.

But The Daily Mail article [ed note: updated for clarity] actually gets it right on the subject of bee death – it explicitly states (all the way down in paragraph 17)

The study did not show that mobile phones were deadly for bees”

But the headline writer may not have read that far. And it’s the headline writer’s job to pump things up to make sure that folks read the article. So he went all out.

Headline: “Why a mobile phone ring may make bees buzz off: Insects infuriated by handset signals”
Tagline: “Phone signals confuses bees and cause them to begin flying erratically before suddenly dying”
Photo caption: “Researchers placed mobile phones in bee hives under controlled conditions and monitored the results. They found the phone signals confused the bees who begin to fly erratically before dying suddenly”

-> Next page: How it spread

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About the Author

Jeremy Bloom is the Editor of RedGreenAndBlue. He just moved to Los Angeles, and continues trying to change the world in positive ways.



  • http://Web stephen

    By 666 years, all men will be sterile from phone-wave vibrations and gays n lesbians will rule the earth; who cares?

  • http://Web Michael

    Don’t go making up something in response to someone making up something. I looked at the pdf article that you referenced, and that sentence does not exist in paragraph 17 or anywhere else in the article. Neither does the word “dying”. You claim something exists “all the way down in paragraph 17″, assuming someone else didn’t read that far. However, at the same time, you make yourself out to be some genius detail person for taking the time to read it. But you also assume that the reader of YOUR article won’t take the time to read it either, and will trust your word. Shame on you for inserting false information!

    All the article does is present results of the study performed. No, it doesn’t say that the bees died, but it doesn’t spell it out in the way that you indicate. Please just stick to the facts.

    • Jeremy Bloom

      Sorry about the confusion. We have two things we’re talking about here:
      1) A research study (which I link to in a PDF)
      2) A news article in the Daily mail that correctly summarizes the research (and had a headline, cutline and photo caption that incorrectly stated the results of the study, in sensational manner)

      Reread what I wrote:

      But the article actually gets it right on the subject of bee death – it explicitly states (all the way down in paragraph 17)
      “The study did not show that mobile phones were deadly for bees”
      But the headline writer may not have read that far.

      The article – the one in the Daily Mail, the one that reported the story, the one that the headline writer punched up by making up the “bees dying” stuff – has exactly the line I say it has, in paragraph 17.

      Headline writers don’t go to original sources to delve further into issues. This one barely read the article his reporter wrote.

      I hope that’s clearer now. (In order to avoid further confusion, I’ve made a change in the text).

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  • http://thehealingfrequency.com/zeolite/ Zeolite

    Bees are important to all life. Without them life on this planet will cease within 4 years – Einstein! hope they can find a way to either make it safe or replace it with a safe and effective energy source.

  • http://Web Rucio

    This is the latest study confirming disorientation caused by electromagnetic radiation or microwaves. England in 2007 (Kuhn et al.), India in 2009 (Pattazhy), Switzerland in 2011 (Favre).

    The sensationalist reporting should not be used as an excuse to ignore the serious questions these works raise.

  • http://dorothylanasa.com/ Dorothy Lanasa

    I bet honeybees won’t get brain cancer.

  • Claud Hopper

    Is anyone surprised that cell phone companies deny any problems? These greedy corporate jerks are profit-oriented and they have their corporate media buddies on their side. Where there is money involved there is always a big lie and denial that anything might be wrong. I am an electronics engineer with 51 years of experience. I know better than to hold a 2.4GHz radio transmitter next to my brain (maybe that’s part of the reason I’m still not fooled by corporate lies). Your cell phone operates at microwave frequencies, the same frequencies that your microwave oven uses. Would you stick your head into a MW oven? You do every time you hold your cell phone next to your head. Sure, it’s not as powerful, but that just means it take longer to cook your brain.

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