View Full Version : Top News From Nba!!!
Basix_Club
11-07-2007, 11:03 AM
Top news from NBA you can see on this most popular basketball site: http://www.basketballmarket.com/ (http://www.spurstalk.com)
clambake
11-07-2007, 11:16 AM
we don't care about basketball
stretch
11-07-2007, 11:22 AM
fuck basketball.
Trainwreck2100
11-07-2007, 11:56 AM
I'm here for the rugby talk myself
mavsfan1000
11-07-2007, 12:25 PM
I'm here for the live stock show and rodeo. Did I find the right spot? :lol
I'm here for the live stock show and rodeo. Did I find the right spot? :lol
:lmao
TDMVPDPOY
11-07-2007, 12:28 PM
fuck this
where are the bravatas...cose this is spurtaa
duncan228
11-07-2007, 02:26 PM
We don't want the most popular basketball site.
We want the best.
Which is why we're here.
Xylus
11-07-2007, 02:26 PM
I'm here for the waffles.
kingsfan
11-07-2007, 07:26 PM
Isn't NBA the National Basketweaving Association? That's why I'm here.
CubanMustGo
11-07-2007, 07:29 PM
Isn't NBA the National Basketweaving Association? That's why I'm here.
When D'Antoni coaches it's the No Brains Association, which is why _da_suns_fan_ is here.
Extra Stout
11-07-2007, 07:33 PM
What is this NBA you speak of. I follow Hellene league. Vagisilis Spanakopitas my faVORITE PLAYER.
kingsfan
11-07-2007, 07:35 PM
When D'Antoni coaches it's the No Brains Association, which is why _da_suns_fan_ is here.That was the Kings last year with the drunk :toast
aww shit, i thought this is where you sign up for the army.
phyzik
11-07-2007, 11:51 PM
Great! I've been looking for news from the National Beekeepers Association!!!
Last thing I heard is from National Geographic....
Bee Decline May Spell End of Some Fruits, Vegetables
John Roach
for National Geographic News
October 5, 2004
Bees, via pollination, are responsible for 15 to 30 percent of the food U.S. consumers eat. But in the last 50 years the domesticated honeybee population—which most farmers depend on for pollination—has declined by about 50 percent, scientists say.
Unless actions are taken to slow the decline of domesticated honeybees and augment their populations with wild bees, many fruits and vegetables may disappear from the food supply, said Claire Kremen, a conservation biologist at Princeton University in New Jersey.
Anecdotes of farmers losing their crops owing to the honeybee shortage appear to be on the increase, Kremen said. Last February, for example, there were insufficient honeybees for all the almond blossoms in California. As a result some farmers failed to meet expected yields.
"There are shortages [like this] that pop up from time to time," Kremen said. "Whether there are more [shortages] than there were 20 years ago, one would guess yes, as there are fewer bees to go around, but it's not well documented."
Maryann Frazier, a senior extension associate in the department of entomology with Pennsylvania State University in State College, said honeybee shortages are not yet impacting commercial producers of crops, but that community farmers "are struggling to get bees for pollination."
In fact, Dewey Caron, an entomologist at the University of Delaware in Newark, started to study the problem of the honeybee decline when he noticed that farmers in the northeastern U.S. increasingly lacked sufficient bee colonies to meet their pollination needs.
"Growers didn't have options if they didn't like the quality [of the bees] they got from one fellow," he said. "So, we started to ask, Well, what is affecting the bees? What can we do to keep them healthier?"
Bee Decline
The honeybee decline, which is affecting domesticated and wild bee populations around the world, is mostly the result of diseases spread as a result of mites and other parasites as well as the spraying of crops with pesticides, scientists say.
Among the greatest problems is the varroa mite, a bloodsucking parasite that attacks young and adult honeybees. Attacked bees often have deformed wings and abdomens and a shortened life span.
"The varroa mite is also really effective at transmitting disease, particularly viruses," Frazier said. Left untreated, a varroa mite infestation can wipe out a bee colony within a few months.
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This deeply concerns me because Barley and Hops are also polenated by bee's... without them, we could see beer prices sky rocket!
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