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Empoisonnement aux Chemtrails par LLP

Empoisonnement aux Chemtrails par LLP

from Dailymotion - popular videos on December 01, 2009
Duration: 1188
Groupe Empoisonnement aux chemtrails : http://www.dailymotion.com/group/chemtrailsGroupe Soutien LLP : http://www.dailymotion.com/group/SoutienLLPLien pour choper l'intégralité des videos du LLP: http://veritercacher.over-blog.com/pages/LLP_LeLibrePenseur_AntiGrellou-1626790.htmlAuthor: tonino17 Tags: empoisonnement chemtrails lelibrepenseur llp wearechange wac poison ciel nuage oxygene avion pesticides ecologie nouvel ordre mondial illuminati cancer pneumonie asthme asthmatique ventoline santé Posted: 01 December 2009 Rating: 4.6 Votes: 11
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West Nile Virus and the Role of Pesticides. Angela Logomasini

West Nile Virus and the Role of Pesticides. Angela Logomasini

from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) on November 28, 2009
Duration: 2201
Ms. Logomasini is Director of Risk and Environmental Policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Doctors for Disaster Preparedness 22nd ANNUAL MEETING SAN DIEGO, CA -JUNE, 2004
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Catching the Drift - Part Two

Catching the Drift - Part Two

from KQED's QUEST Science Radio on October 26, 2009
Duration: 340
Conflicts over pesticide use have increased as new suburbs push up against farming areas in California. In the second part of our series, Sasha Khokha looks at how community residents are looking to document the impact of pesticides on their own health when those chemicals drift off the farm.
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Catching the Drift

Catching the Drift

from KQED's QUEST Science Radio on October 19, 2009
Duration: 340
Every year California farmers spray more than 150 million pounds of pesticides to keep insects from ravaging crops like almonds, oranges, and grapes. But when those toxins drift onto nearby farmworkers and communities, they sicken hundreds of people each year. California legislators tried to fix the problem five years ago, but new laws don't appear to have made much of a difference.
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The Politics of Green Wine

The Politics of Green Wine

from KQED's QUEST Science Radio on September 08, 2009
Duration: 340
Wine grapes are one of the most sprayed crops in California. A growing number of farmers are choosing not to spray and are doing other things for the environment, too. The challenge is there are now so many choices when it comes to green wines, it can be baffling for the eco-conscious consumer. Organic, sustainable, biodynamic, natural... what does it all mean?
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Misconceptions about Pollution, Pesticides, and the Prevention of Cancer. Lois Swirsky Gold, Ph.D.

Misconceptions about Pollution, Pesticides, and the Prevention of Cancer. Lois Swirsky Gold, Ph.D.

from recent posts tagged prevention - blip.tv (beta) on August 21, 2009
Duration: 3797
Dr. Gold, the author of more than 120 papers, is Director of the Carcinogenic Potency Project at UC Berkeley. Doctors for Disaster Preparedness 18th Annual Meeting San Francisco, CA. June 2000
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A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 5 - Setting up the experiment

A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 5 - Setting up the experiment

from recent posts tagged bees - blip.tv (beta) on July 16, 2009
Duration: 32
Walter (Steve) Sheppard is one busy man, flying his own plane around the Pacific Northwest to meet with beekeepers and deliver queen-breeding stock produced in his honey bee breeding program to beekeeper collaborators. He also travels to countries such as Kazakhstan to study populations of honey bees from wild apple forests that have the potential to be added to Washington State University breeding stock. Over the years, he and his students have bred bees to resist parasites and diseases, produce more honey, and survive harsh winters better than their ancestors. He's even bred friendlier bees that are easier for beekeepers to work with.Among the problems Sheppard is working on now is colony collapse disorder, in which honey bees leave their hives and simply don't return. There are reports that the disorder has devastated commercial bee operations in many parts of the country, although it is still a rare occurrence in the Pacific Northwest.Honey bee health is crucial to the nation's farmers and fruit growers, who rely on bees to pollinate crops such as apples, cranberries, and watermelons. Together, honey-bee-pollinated crops are worth more than $9 billion a year to the American economy.Earlier this year we caught up with Prof. Sheppard while he and his crew were bringing honey bees out of their winter hives and distributing them into small mating hives where the new queens will be produced over the summer. Sheppard talked with us about honey bee health, his breeding program, and the research he's doing to try to pinpoint the cause of colony collapse disorder.Sheppard directs the Apis Molecular Systematics Laboratory at WSU. He was a member of the Honey Bee Genome Project, an international consortium of scientists that earlier this year published the complete DNA sequence of the honey bee, Apis mellifera.In a series of five brief video clips produced by Adam Ratliff and Cherie Winner for Washington State Magazine Online, Steve Sheppard talks about honey bee health and colony collapse disorder.
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A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 1 - Threats to honey bee health

A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 1 - Threats to honey bee health

from recent posts tagged bees - blip.tv (beta) on July 15, 2009
Duration: 35
Walter (Steve) Sheppard is one busy man, flying his own plane around the Pacific Northwest to meet with beekeepers and deliver queen-breeding stock produced in his honey bee breeding program to beekeeper collaborators. He also travels to countries such as Kazakhstan to study populations of honey bees from wild apple forests that have the potential to be added to Washington State University breeding stock. Over the years, he and his students have bred bees to resist parasites and diseases, produce more honey, and survive harsh winters better than their ancestors. He's even bred friendlier bees that are easier for beekeepers to work with.Among the problems Sheppard is working on now is colony collapse disorder, in which honey bees leave their hives and simply don't return. There are reports that the disorder has devastated commercial bee operations in many parts of the country, although it is still a rare occurrence in the Pacific Northwest.Honey bee health is crucial to the nation's farmers and fruit growers, who rely on bees to pollinate crops such as apples, cranberries, and watermelons. Together, honey-bee-pollinated crops are worth more than $9 billion a year to the American economy.Earlier this year we caught up with Prof. Sheppard while he and his crew were bringing honey bees out of their winter hives and distributing them into small mating hives where the new queens will be produced over the summer. Sheppard talked with us about honey bee health, his breeding program, and the research he's doing to try to pinpoint the cause of colony collapse disorder.Sheppard directs the Apis Molecular Systematics Laboratory at WSU. He was a member of the Honey Bee Genome Project, an international consortium of scientists that earlier this year published the complete DNA sequence of the honey bee, Apis mellifera.In a series of five brief video clips produced by Adam Ratliff and Cherie Winner for Washington State Magazine Online, Steve Sheppard talks about honey bee health and colony collapse disorder.
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A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 2 - Breeding better bees

A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 2 - Breeding better bees

from recent posts tagged bees - blip.tv (beta) on July 15, 2009
Duration: 125
Walter (Steve) Sheppard is one busy man, flying his own plane around the Pacific Northwest to meet with beekeepers and deliver queen-breeding stock produced in his honey bee breeding program to beekeeper collaborators. He also travels to countries such as Kazakhstan to study populations of honey bees from wild apple forests that have the potential to be added to Washington State University breeding stock. Over the years, he and his students have bred bees to resist parasites and diseases, produce more honey, and survive harsh winters better than their ancestors. He's even bred friendlier bees that are easier for beekeepers to work with.Among the problems Sheppard is working on now is colony collapse disorder, in which honey bees leave their hives and simply don't return. There are reports that the disorder has devastated commercial bee operations in many parts of the country, although it is still a rare occurrence in the Pacific Northwest.Honey bee health is crucial to the nation's farmers and fruit growers, who rely on bees to pollinate crops such as apples, cranberries, and watermelons. Together, honey-bee-pollinated crops are worth more than $9 billion a year to the American economy.Earlier this year we caught up with Prof. Sheppard while he and his crew were bringing honey bees out of their winter hives and distributing them into small mating hives where the new queens will be produced over the summer. Sheppard talked with us about honey bee health, his breeding program, and the research he's doing to try to pinpoint the cause of colony collapse disorder.Sheppard directs the Apis Molecular Systematics Laboratory at WSU. He was a member of the Honey Bee Genome Project, an international consortium of scientists that earlier this year published the complete DNA sequence of the honey bee, Apis mellifera.In a series of five brief video clips produced by Adam Ratliff and Cherie Winner for Washington State Magazine Online, Steve Sheppard talks about honey bee health and colony collapse disorder.
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A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 4 - Is colony collapse disorder linked to pesticide use?

A Buzz about Bees - Pt. 4 - Is colony collapse disorder linked to pesticide use?

from recent posts tagged bees - blip.tv (beta) on July 15, 2009
Duration: 44
Walter (Steve) Sheppard is one busy man, flying his own plane around the Pacific Northwest to meet with beekeepers and deliver queen-breeding stock produced in his honey bee breeding program to beekeeper collaborators. He also travels to countries such as Kazakhstan to study populations of honey bees from wild apple forests that have the potential to be added to Washington State University breeding stock. Over the years, he and his students have bred bees to resist parasites and diseases, produce more honey, and survive harsh winters better than their ancestors. He's even bred friendlier bees that are easier for beekeepers to work with.Among the problems Sheppard is working on now is colony collapse disorder, in which honey bees leave their hives and simply don't return. There are reports that the disorder has devastated commercial bee operations in many parts of the country, although it is still a rare occurrence in the Pacific Northwest.Honey bee health is crucial to the nation's farmers and fruit growers, who rely on bees to pollinate crops such as apples, cranberries, and watermelons. Together, honey-bee-pollinated crops are worth more than $9 billion a year to the American economy.Earlier this year we caught up with Prof. Sheppard while he and his crew were bringing honey bees out of their winter hives and distributing them into small mating hives where the new queens will be produced over the summer. Sheppard talked with us about honey bee health, his breeding program, and the research he's doing to try to pinpoint the cause of colony collapse disorder.Sheppard directs the Apis Molecular Systematics Laboratory at WSU. He was a member of the Honey Bee Genome Project, an international consortium of scientists that earlier this year published the complete DNA sequence of the honey bee, Apis mellifera.In a series of five brief video clips produced by Adam Ratliff and Cherie Winner for Washington State Magazine Online, Steve Sheppard talks about honey bee health and colony collapse disorder.
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