WATCH: HONEY BEES DROP DEAD FOLLOWING CALIFORNIA EARTHQUAKE

July 11, 2019 in News by RBN

Published: July 10, 2019

SOURCE: ZEROHEDGE

If the dwindling bee population across the US wasn’t enough, new footage uploaded onto social media shows, in one instance, thousands of bees dropping dead upon a series of earthquakes that shook California last week, reported Sputnik.

Southern California was hit by two earthquakes late last week: a 6.4 magnitude quake on Thursday, accompanied by a 7.1 magnitude earthquake Friday evening, both with an epicenter near the Mojave Desert.

On Saturday morning, blogger Khalil Underwood from California uploaded the footage onto Twitter of thousands of dying bees spread across his driveway following the massive quakes.

A terrified Underwood told his followers: “This is crazy. I’ve never witnessed anything like this.”

“Look how many f***ing bees are on the f***ing floor from the earthquake.”

He first tweeted there was “like 70 [bees] on the floor just buzzing & dying,” but later said, “I wasn’t exaggerating or joking….. after the Earthquake thousands of bees were vibrating on the floor and dying…. this shit was so crazy to me.”

Over 500 responses had people from all walks of life try to explain what exactly happened to the bees. Some suggested the quake had distorted the magnetic fields the bees’ brains were dependent on leaving them disoriented.

​”I just read that they abandon the hive during earthquakes, and return when it’s over. The constant aftershocks could be keeping them from ‘homing, which is probably not good”, one Twitter user wrote, while another associated the bee deaths to fluctuations in the Earth’s magnetic field during quakes.

There is no definitive answer as to why the bees died after the quakes.

However, a study from Taiwan during two significant earthquakes in 1999 and 2002 showed a catastrophic effect on insect communities, resulting in “large declines in total individual number but also total species number of insects.”

The US Geological Survey (USGS) had previously said it is “possible” a “seismic-escape response” may have triggered animals’ natural instincts to escape predators.

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Since Thursday, Southern California has been hit with a series of earthquakes and aftershocks all the way up to two that measured 6.4 and a whopping 7.1 magnitude. The epicenter of both quakes was near the town of Ridgecrest, with a population of nearly 29,000 people.

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