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None of the chemicals themselves were at high enough levels to kill bees, he said, but it was the combination and variety of them that is worrisome. University of Illinois entomologist May Berenbaum called the results "kind of alarming." Despite EPA assurances, environmental groups don't think the EPA is doing enough on pesticides. Bayer Crop Science started petitioning the agency to approve a new pesticide for sale in 2006. After reviewing the company's studies of its effects on bees, the EPA gave Bayer conditional approval to sell the product two years later, but said it had to carry a label warning that it was "potentially toxic to honey bee larvae through residues in pollen and nectar." The Natural Resources Defense Council sued, saying the agency failed to give the public timely notice for the new pesticide application. In December, a federal judge in New York agreed, banning the pesticide's sale and earlier this month, two more judges upheld the ruling. "This court decision is obviously very painful for us right now, and for growers who don't have access to that product," said Jack Boyne, an entomologist and spokesman for Bayer Crop Science. "This product quite frankly is not harmful to honeybees." Boyne said the pesticide was sold for only about a year and most sales were in California, Arizona and Florida. The product is intended to disrupt the mating patterns of insects that threaten citrus, lettuce and grapes, he said. Berenbaum's research shows pesticides are not the only problem. She said multiple viruses also are attacking the bees, making it tough to propose a single solution. "Things are still heading downhill," she said. For Browning, one of the country's largest commercial beekeepers, the latest woes have led to a $1 million loss this year. "It's just hard to get past this," he said, watching as workers cleaned honey from empty wooden hives Monday. "I'm going to rebuild, but I have plenty of friends who aren't going to make it." ___ On the Net: The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Colony Collapse Disorder: http://tinyurl.com/usdaccd The study in Public Library of Science One: http://tinyurl.com/beepaper
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