加拿大卡车翻车 ,1200万蜜蜂出逃警方难处理【照片】

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http://www.backchina.com/newspage/2008/07/01/161015.shtml

倍可亲 京港台时间:07/01 向您播报 消息来源:中国新闻网 字体: 【字号:大 中 小】 打印版

综合报道,一辆卡车6月30日在加拿大的新不伦瑞克西北部公路上翻车,释放出至少1200万只蜜蜂。警方表示目前仍难于处理事件,已经请相关专家赶来协助。

  


  卡车翻车导致1200万蜜蜂出逃。

  警方称,运载着330箱蜜蜂的货车上斜坡时,货箱侧向一边,导致货车翻车。幸好当时落大雨,令蜜蜂只在货车四周盘旋。农业部蜜蜂专家奉召到场进行善后,货车司机并未受伤。

  据专家介绍,这些蜜蜂有可能在附近地区“安家落户”但长期生存的可能性不大。
 
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Millions of bees from overturned truck 'get nasty' as they're moved

Millions of bees from overturned truck 'get nasty' as they're moved

Last Updated: Monday, June 30, 2008 | 10:23 PM AT Comments49Recommend74

CBC News


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Bees buzz atop a cargo van on a New Brunswick highway on Monday, June 30.
(CBC-TV)Improving weather conditions in northwestern New Brunswick is making the recovery of 12 million bees that spilled onto the Trans-Canada Highway after an accident on Monday morning more difficult.

Until the late afternoon, light rain in the area had kept most of the honeybees calm as bee experts worked to slowly move 330 crates of the insects onto a new truck after the vehicle they were in overturned.

But as the weather lifted in the afternoon, the bees began to swarm and sting the workers more, police said.

Officials are now smoking the bees and using hoses from fire trucks to mist the crates, which contain about 35,000 bees each and four hives, in an attempt to calm them and make them more manageable to move.

Police set up a detour in the area to reroute traffic on Monday afternoon.

Initially the westbound lanes of the Trans-Canada Highway near the accident scene were closed but many locals were flocking to the area to see the accident, police said.

The bees are becoming agitated by all the activity around them and have begun flying, police said.
Just having some of the lanes of traffic closed was still posing a risk to the public because many of the people passing through the area were on motorcycles or in convertibles, police said.

Bees began to escape on Monday morning after the truck transporting them overturned on a Trans-Canada Highway ramp near Saint-Léonard in northwest New Brunswick after its load shifted,

RCMP said. The driver was not injured.

The bees were being returned to a beekeeper in Ontario after being used to pollinate blueberry crops near Tracadie-Sheila in northeastern New Brunswick.

'They got nasty,' says beekeeper


Though only the crate in the front of the truck had been damaged in the accident, the work to move the insects seems to be encouraging more bees to leave the boxes, said Drummond beekeeper Edmond Bellefleur, who went to the site to have a look.

"Once they started to open the netting and [were] unpacking the hives one by one and putting them on pallets, then they really started to fly, and they got nasty," Bellefleur said.

There were enough bees in the area that their buzzing could be heard, CBC's Alison Northcott said.
She said the bees appeared to be swarming the people working at the scene. She said in the minute or so she spent outside of her vehicle, she was stung several times.

Seven bee experts arrived at the scene by about noon AT on Monday. Donning full beekeeper suits, they began the effort to move the bees and their crates to another vehicle to continue the journey back to Ontario, said RCMP Sgt. Derek Strong.

The bees will not be moved until nightfall, because they tend to return to their hives when it gets dark, he said.

No reason to panic


Strong said the experts onsite have reported the situation is under control and there is no reason for the public to panic.

However, anyone with bee allergies and at a risk of anaphylactic shock should leave the area until the situation has been resolved, Strong said.

Emergency personnel, including paramedics and ambulances, are on the scene in case anyone is stung, Strong said.

The detour on Monday was slowing traffic and backing it up for several kilometres. Officials said the highway is expected to be reduced to one lane until at least 9 p.m. AT.

Some stings have been reported by those at the scene, Strong said, but no injuries have yet been reported from the general public. The accident, however, is being treated as a public safety issue, he said.

Unlikely to survive on their own


Honeybees don't usually sting unless they are being bothered, said Richard Duplain, vice-president of the New Brunswick Beekeepers Association. The bees die after they sting someone.

If the bees are not captured, they could disperse into the countryside in search of a protected area, such as a tree hollow or a house, Duplan said.

He added that any of the bees that leave the truck aren't likely to survive for long after being raised by beekeepers.

"Weather conditions, birds and so forth would take a toll on the unprotected bees," Duplain said.

"They don't create their own paper nest like wasps or hornets or bumblebees. They're pretty much at risk to the elements if they're not under the care and attention of an experienced beekeeper."
 
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Prince George Citizen - Trans-Canada in N.B. buzzes with action after truck spills million of bees

Trans-Canada in N.B. buzzes with action after truck spills million of bees Written by Kevin Bissett, THE CANADIAN PRESS Monday, 30 June 2008

A truck carrying 12 million honey bees overturned on the Trans-Canada Highway in northwest New Brunswick on Monday, June 30, 2008 but police say rain in the area has helped contain the bees. THE CANADIAN PRESS/La Cataracte-Madeleine LeClair



ST. LEONARD, N.B. - Beekeepers in New Brunswick had the unenviable and sometimes painful task Monday of recovering 12 million angry honeybees from a truck that tipped over on the Trans-Canada Highway.

One beekeeper described the normally peaceable bees as "nasty" because of the ordeal that occurred on a return trip to Ontario after they were used to pollinate blueberry fields in the province.

RCMP Sgt. Derek Strong said the flatbed truck, carrying 330 crates of bees, was travelling on a highway ramp near St. Leonard, in the northwest corner of the province, south of Quebec, when the load shifted and the vehicle rolled on its side shortly after 6 a.m.

Many of the crates - each containing four hives - broke open on impact.

"With the impact they just went crazy," said beekeeper Edmond Bellefleur, who drove from his home in nearby Drummond to have a look.

"The ones that were able to get out, did get out. You could see some others sticking to the hives, but once they started to open the netting and unpacking the hives ... then they really started to fly, and they got nasty."

Strong said a number of people were stung, including a reporter 15 times. Emergency personnel, including paramedics and ambulances, were kept on standby.

No one had to be hospitalized.

"There can be quite a serious health concern," Strong said. "Many people are allergic to bees and even if they're not, multiple bee stings can be quite serious."

He said officials initially got lucky with the weather because it was raining at the time of the accident, but when the rain stopped, firefighters sprayed a mist on the truck to help control the bees.

"Bees don't like to fly in the rain," said Jordan O'Brien, a spokesman for the New Brunswick Agriculture Department.

Seven beekeepers were called in to round them up. The highway was closed to traffic in both directions as the crates of bees were delicately loaded onto a second flatbed truck.

The original plan was to try to flip the truck back onto its wheels, but officials decided the best way to recover the insects was to move them, one crate at a time, to the other truck.

The highway had reopened to traffic by late afternoon and Strong said the driver of the second truck was waiting until dark to resume the journey.

Police advised anyone with an allergy to bee stings to stay away from the community for the day.

The driver of the truck was not hurt.

Richard Duplain, vice-president of the New Brunswick Beekeepers Association, said honeybees generally won't sting unless they're being bothered.

"It's certainly not a situation where you want to tempt problems," said Duplain, adding honeybees die once they sting someone.

"Like a field with any agitated livestock, you're not going to go walking through the middle of it. You certainly don't want to go walking through a field of disoriented, agitated and wet honeybees."

Duplain said the bees would have likely died if they had dispersed into the countryside.

"Weather conditions, birds and so forth would take a toll on the unprotected bees," said Duplain, a beekeeper in Hanwell, N.B., for the past three years.

"They don't create their own paper nest like wasps or hornets or bumblebees. They're pretty much at risk to the elements if they're not under the care and attention of an experienced beekeeper."
 
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