Papadopoulos, Dennis, Paul A. Bernhardt, Herbert C. Carlson, Jr., William E. Gordon, Alexander V. Gurevich, Michael C. Kelley, Michael J. Keskinen, Roald Z. Sagdeev, and Gennady M. Milikh. 1995. HAARP: Research and Applications. A Joint Program of Phillips Laboratory and the Office of Naval Research. Executive Summary. Washington, DC: Naval Research Laboratory.
Weinberger, Sharon. 2008. “Heating Up the Heavens.” Nature 452: 930-32.
Williams, Richard. 1988. “Atmospheric Threat.” Physics and Society 17(2): 16.
Zickuhr, Clare and Gar Smith. 1994. “Project HAARP: The Military’s Plan to Alter the Ionosphere.” Earth Island Journal, Fall 1994, pp. 21–23.
Armas, Genaro C. 1998. “The Homing Pigeons That Didn’t.” Seattle Times, October 9.
Chaudhary, Vivek. 2004. “Phone Masts Blamed for Pigeons’ Lost Art.” The Guardian, January 23.
Elston, Laura. 2004. “Phone Masts ‘Knocking Racing Pigeons off Track.’” The Press Association (UK), January 23.
Haughey, Nuala. 1997. “Mobile Phones Blamed for Poor Pigeon Performance.” Irish Times, July 21.
Hummell, Steve. 2005. “Lost Pigeons Create Flap; Cellphone Signals Responsible for Sending Birds off Course, Racers Say.” Vancouver Sun, October 3.
Indian Express. 2°10. “Cellphone Towers Disorient Homer Pigeons.” December 27.
Keeton, William T. 1972. “Effects of Magnets on Pigeon Homing.” In: S. R. Galler, K. Schmidt-Koenig, G. J. Jacobs, and R. E. Belleville, eds., Animal Orientation and Navigation (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office), NASA SP-262, pp. 579-94.
–. 1979. “Avian Orientation and Navigation: A Brief Overview.” British Birds 72(10): 451-70.
Keeton, William T., Timothy S. Larkin, and Donald M. Windsor. 1974. “Normal Fluctuations in the Earth’s Magnetic Field Influence Pigeon Orientation.” Journal of Comparative Physiology 95: 95-1°3.
New York Post. 1998. “2,400 Homing Pigeons Fly the Coop in Race.” October 8.
Wee, Eric L. 1998. “Homing Pigeons Race Off to Oblivion.” Washington Post, October 8.
–. 1998. “Some Birds Lost During Races Are Turning Up at Area Homes, Barns and Feeders.” Washington Post, October 9.
Anderson, John. 1930a. “‘Isle of Wight Disease’ in Bees. I.” Bee World 11(4): 37–42.
1930b. “‘Isle of Wight Disease’ in Bees – II. A Check to the Immunity Hypothesis.” Bee World 11(5): 50-53.
Bailey, Leslie 1958. “The Epidemiology of the Infestation of the Honeybee, Apis mel– lifera L., by the Mite Acarapis woodi Rennie and the Mortality of Infested Bees.” Parasitology 48(3–4): 493-5°6.
–. 1964. “The ‘Isle of Wight disease’: The Origin and Significance of the Myth.” Bee World 45(1): 32–37, 18.
Bailey, Leslie and D. C. Lee. 1959. “The Effect of Infestation with Acarapis woodi (Rennie) on the Mortality of Honey Bees.” Journal of Insect Pathology 1(1): 15–24.
Bailey, Leslie and Brenda V. Ball. 1991. Honey Bee Pathology. London: Academic.
Barrionuevo, Alexei. 2007. “Honeybees, Gone with the Wind, Leave Crops and Keepers in Peril.” New York Times, February 27, p. A1.
Boecking O. and W. Ritter. 1993. “Grooming and Removal Behaviour of Apis mellif– era intermissa in Tunisia against Varroa jacobsoni.” Journal of Apicultural Research 32: 127-34.
Borenstein, Seth. 2007. “Honeybee Die-off Threatens Food Supply.” Washington Post, May 2.
Calderón Rafael A., Natalia Fallas, Luis G. Zamora, Johan W. van Veen, and Luis A. Sánchez. 2009. “Behavior of Varroa Mites in Worker Brood Cells of Africanized Honey Bees.” Experimental and Applied Acarology 49(4): 329-38.
Carr, Elmer G.. 1918. “An Unusual Disease of Honey Bees.” Journal of Economic Entomology 11(4): 347-51.
Dahlen, Sage. 2007. “Colony Collapse Disorder.” The Wake, Summer 2007, p. 15.
Favre, Daniel. 2°11. “Mobile Phone-induced Honeybee Worker Piping.” Apidologie 42: 270-79.
Finley, Jennifer, Scott Camazine, and Maryann Frazier. 1996. “The Epidemic of Honey Bee Colony Losses during the 1995–1996 Season.” American Bee Journal 136(11): 8°5-8.
Fries, Ingemar, Anton Imdorf, and Peter Rosenkranz. 2006. “Survival of Mite Infested (Varroa destructor) Honey Bee (Apis mellifera) Colonies in a Nordic Climate. Api– dologie 37: 1–7.
Hamzelou, Jessica. 2007. “Where Have All the Bees Gone?” Lancet 370: 639.
Henderson, Colin, Jerry Bromenshenk, Larry Tarver, and Dave Plummer. 2007. National Honey Bee Loss Survey. Missoula, MT: Bee Alert Technology, Inc.
Imms, Augustus D. 19°7. “Report on a Disease of Bees in the Isle of Wight.” Journal of the Board of Agriculture 14(3): 129-40.
Kauffeld, Norbert M., James H. Everitt, and Edgar A. Taylor. 1976. “Honey Bee Problems in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.” American Bee Journal 116: 220, 222, 232.
Kraus, Bernhard and Robert E. Page, Jr. 1995. “Effect of Varroa jacobsoni (Mesostigmata: Varroidae) on Feral Apis mellifera (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in California.” Environmental Entomology 24(6): 1474-80.
Kumar, Neelima R., Sonika Sangwan, and Pooja Badotra. 2°11. “Exposure to Cell Phone Radiations Produces Biochemical Changes in Worker Honey Bees.” Toxicology International 18(1): 70-72.
Le Conte, Yves, Marion Ellis, and Wolfgang Ritter. 2°10. “Varroa Mites and Honey Bee Health: Can Varroa Explain Part of the Colony Losses?” Apidologie 41(3): 353-63.
Lee, Kathleen V., Nathalie A. Steinhauer, Karen Rennich, Michael E. Wilson, David R. Tarpy, Dewey M. Caron, Robyn Rose, Keith S. Delaplane, Kathy Baylis, Eugene J. Lengerich, Jeffery Pettis, John A. Skinner, James T. Wilkes, Ramesh Sagili, and Dennis vanEngelsdorp. 2°15. “A National Survey of Managed Honey Bee 2°13-2°14 Annual Colony Losses in the USA.” Apidologie 46: 292-3°5.
Lindauer, Martin and Herman Martin. 1972. “Magnetic Effect on Dancing Bees.” In: Sidney R. Galler, Klaus Schmidt-Koenig, G. J. Jacobs, and Richard E. Belleville, eds., Animal Orientation and Navigation, (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office), NASA SP-262, pp. 559-67.
McCarthy, Michael. 2°11. “Decline of Honey Bees Now a Global Phenomenon, Says United Nations.” The Independent, March 10.
O’Hanlon, Kevin. 1997. “Few Honeybees Means Poorer Fruit, Vegetables.” Associated Press, May 28.
Oldroyd, Benjamin P. 1999. “Coevolution While You Wait: Varroa jacobsoni, a New Parasite of Western Honeybees.” Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14(8): 312-15, 1999.
–. 2007. “What’s Killing American Honey Bees?” PLoS Biology 5(6): 1195-99.
Page, Robert E. 1998. “Blessing or Curse? Varroa Mite Impacts Africanized Bee Spread and Beekeeping.” California Agriculture 52(2): 9-13.
Pattazhy, Sainudeen. 2°11a. Impact of Electromagnetic Radiation on the Density of Honeybees: A Case Study. Saarbrücken, Germany: Lambert Academic.
–. 2°11b. “Impact of Mobile Phones on the Density of Honey Bees.” Munis Entomology and Zoology 6(1): 396-99.
–. 2°12. “Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR) Clashes with Honeybees.” Journal of Entomology and Nematology 4(10): 1–3.
Phillips, Ernest F. 1925. “The Status of Isle of Wight Disease in Various Countries.” Journal of Economic Entomology 18: 391-95.
Rennie, John, Philip Bruce White, and Elsie J. Harvey. 1921. “Isle of Wight Disease in Hive Bees: The Etiology of the Disease.” Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. 52, part 4, no. 29, pp. 737-79.
Rinderer, Thomas E., Lilia I. de Guzman, G. T. Delatte, J. A. Stelzer, V. A. Lancaster, V. Kuznetsov, L. Beaman, R. Watts, and J. W. Harris. 2001. “Resistance to the Parasitic Mite Varroa destructor in Honey Bees from Far-Eastern Russia.” Apidologie 32: 381-94.
Ruzicka, Ferdinand. 2003. “Schäden Durch Elektrosmog.” Bienenwelt 10: 34–35.
–. 2006. “Schäden an Bienenvölkern.” Diagnose: Funk 2006.
Sanford, Malcolm T. 2004. “Mite Tolerance in Honey Bees.” Bee Culture 132(10): 23–26.
Science Daily. 1998. “Where Have All the Honeybees Gone?” July 6.
–. 2°10. “Survey Reports Latest Honey Bee Losses.” May 3.
Seeley, Thomas D. 2004. “Forest Bees and Varroa Mites.” Bee Culture, July, pp. 22–23.
–. 2007. “Honey Bees of the Arnot Forest: A Population of Feral Colonies Persisting with Varroa destructor in the Northeastern United States.” Apidologie 38: 19–29.
Sharma, Ved Parkash and Neelima R. Kumar. 2°10. “Changes in Honeybee Behaviour and Biology under the Influence of Cellphone Radiations.” Current Science 98(10): 1376-78.
Spleen, Angela M., Eugene J. Lengerich, Karen Rennich, Dewey Caron, Robyn Rose, Jeffery S. Pettis, Mark Henson, James T. Wilkes, Michael Wilson, Jennie Stitzinger, Kathleen Lee, Michael Andree, Robert Snyder, and Dennis vanEngelsdorp, for the Bee Informed Partnership. 2°13. “A National Survey of Managed Honey Bee 2°11-12 Winter Losses in the United States: Results from the Bee Informed Partnership.” Journal of Apicultural Research 52(2): 44–53.
Steinhauer, Nathalie A., Karen Rennich, Michael E. Wilson, Dewey M. Caron, Eugene J. Lengerich, Jeffery S. Pettis, Robyn Rose, John A. Skinner, David R. Tarpy, James T. Wilkes, and Dennis vanEngelsdorp. 2°14. “A National Survey of Managed Honey Bee 2°12-2°13 Annual Colony Losses in the USA: Results from the Bee Informed Partnership. Journal of Apicultural Research 53(1): 1-18.
Steinhauer, Nathalie, Karen Rennich, Kathleen Lee, Jeffery Pettis, David R. Tarpy, Juliana Rangel, Dewey Caron, Ramesh Sagili, John A. Skinner, Michael E. Wilson, James T. Wilkes, Keith S. Delaplane, Robyn Rose, and Dennis vanEngelsdorp. 2°15. “Colony Loss 2°14-2°15: Preliminary Results.” Bee Informed Partnership, UK.
Svensson, Börje. 2003. “Silent Spring in Northern Europe?” Bees for Development Journal 71: 3–4.
United States Dept of Agriculture, National Agricultural Statistics Service. 2°10. Honey, February.
–. 2°11. Honey, February.
Underwood, Robyn M. and Dennis vanEngelsdorp. 2007. “Colony Collapse Disorder: Have We Seen This Before?” Bee Culture 35(7): 13–18.