US approves use of world’s first vaccine for honeybees

In other words they found a new way to put chemicals in our bodies
without most people realizing it… I wonder if we will find some
residues of that vaccine in the honey we eat, when they stitch us.
Are they trying to kill the bees to disrupt pollination, to disrupt
the food chain? I wonder if Bill Gates or any other depopulationist
is behind this completely crazy idea… I am concerned… I mean,
Leave… Bees… ALONE!
The world's first vaccine for honeybees has been approved for use
by the US government, raising hopes of a new weapon against
diseases that routinely ravage colonies that are relied upon for food
pollination.
The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has granted a conditional
license for a vaccine created by Dalan Animal Health, a US biotech
company, to help protect honeybees from American foulbrood disease.
"Our vaccine is a breakthrough in protecting honeybees," said Annette
Kleiser, chief executive of Dalan Animal Health. "We are ready
to change how we care for insects, impacting food production on
a global scale."
The vaccine, which will initially be available to commercial
beekeepers, aims to curb foulbrood, a serious disease caused by the
bacterium Paenibacillus larvae that can weaken and kill hives. There
is currently no cure for the disease, which in parts of the US has
been found in a quarter of hives, requiring beekeepers to destroy
and burn any infected colonies and administer antibiotics to prevent
further spread.
"It's something that beekeepers can easily recognize because
it reduces the larvae to this brown goo that has a rancid stink
to it," said Keith Delaplane, an entomologist at the University
of Georgia, which has partnered with Dalan for the vaccine's
development.
https://youtu.be/_rUBeGP_pu8
The vaccine works by incorporating some of the bacteria into the
royal jelly fed by worker bees to the queen, which then ingests it
and gains some of the vaccine in the ovaries. The developing bee
larvae then have immunity to foulbrood as they hatch, with studies
by Dalan suggesting this will reduce death rates from the disease.
"In a perfect scenario, the queens could be fed a cocktail within
a queen candy - the soft, pasty sugar that queen bees eat while in
transit," Delaplane said. "Queen breeders could advertise 'fully
vaccinated queens.'"
American foulbrood originated in the US, and has since spread around
the world. Dalan said the breakthrough could be used to find vaccines
for other bee-related diseases, such as the European version
of foulbrood.
As they have been commercialized, transported and pressed into
agricultural service, honeybees have been exposed to a cocktail
of different diseases that typically lay waste to large numbers
of colonies and require major interventions by beekeepers to keep
numbers up.
The US is unusually dependent upon managed honeybee colonies
to prop up its food pollination, with hives routinely trucked across
the country to propagate everything from almonds to blueberries.
This is because many wild bee species are in alarming decline, due
to habitat loss, pesticide use and the climate crisis, fueling
concerns around a global crisis in insect numbers that threatens
ecosystems and human food security and health.
https://bit.ly/3IAyxSq