And it comes under the banner of Harvard.

http://www.scotsman.com/news/environ...hows-1-3405681

'Man poisons bee hives with high doses of insecticides - continues to do so after being pilloried for his bad science previously'

That would be my headline.

From the Scotsman:

'Prof Lu’s latest findings, published in the Bulletin of Insectology, have shown low doses of a second neonicotinoid, clothianidin, had the same negative effect on bees. He said: “We demonstrated again in this study that neonicotinoids are highly likely to be responsible for triggering CCD in honey bee hives that were healthy prior to the arrival of winter.” '

Appalling stuff. The amounts used approached the known LD50 levels, the levels at which half the insects exposed in short-term trials died. Amount about a hundred-fold higher than they may be getting from OSR, which my bees are guzzling enthusiastically at the moment when the sun comes out. But these days at Harvard you can poison bees with known toxic levels of insecticide and claim that you are revealing CCD.

Randy Oliver on his earlier work:
http://scientificbeekeeping.com/the-...noids-and-ccd/

Jim Fischer on Bee-L today:

Medhat pointed out a NEW paper by our man at Harvard, Dr. Chensheng Lu.

http://www.bulletinofinsectology.org...-125-130lu.pdf
http://tinyurl.com/lgvec22

“…we administered 258 µg of imidacloprid … or clothianidin in 1.9
liter (0.5 gallon) of sucrose water and HFCS to the treated
colonies each week, respectively, for thirteen consecutive weeks
ending on September 17th 2012.”

Back of the envelope time:

258 µg in 1.9 liters of feed = 258/1.9 = 135.78 µg/L.

1 µg/L = 1 ppb, so 135 µg/L = 135 ppb

Bayer’s own FAQ says that the acute oral LD50 for Imidacloprid is 0.005
µg/bee, which equals 192 ppb
http://bee-quick.com/reprints/imd/BayerFAQ.pdf‎
http://tinyurl.com/kjrrsoh

Is the difference between 192 ppb and 135 ppb worth pondering? Or even
discussing? This looks like a fatal dose level for almost, but not quite
half the bees who are fed the dose.

For clothiandin, the EPA says that the LD50 > 0.0439 µg/bee, roughly 10x the
LD50 for Imidacloprid.

http://www.epa.gov/opp00001/chem_sea...on/fs_PC-04430
9_30-May-03.pdf
http://tinyurl.com/kq2j8qt

So, my rough calculations say that the study should show very bad news for
Imidacloprid-treated hives and perhaps some brood impact on the
Clothiandin-treated hives, but certainly less mortality. While they did NOT
kill the Imidacloprid-treated hives anywhere near as quickly as I would have
expected, they did see worse results for Imidacloprid.

Note that the LD50 is the dose where half the bees die quickly, so if you
get anywhere near the LD50 dose, you should still see significant acute
mortality.

"The Return of Dr. Lu"... too bad Vincent Price has died, as he would be the
best person to play the lead role in the film version of something with that
sort of a name.