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Swiss bee colonies poisoned by insecticide

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
July 16, 2026
in Switzerland
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Several bee colonies have been poisoned in the Landquart region

Several bee colonies have been poisoned in the Landquart region


Keystone-SDA

Forty five bee colonies have been poisoned by a plant protection insecticide in southeastern Switzerland.





Generated with artificial intelligence.


This content was published on


July 16, 2026 – 16:20

Some colonies have been severely weakened, the canton Graubünden veterinary officer stated.

+ Switzerland’s battle of the bees

The bee colonies at two sites in the Landquart region showed signs of poisoning, Giochen Bearth told the Keystone-SDA news agency, confirming a report by Swiss public broadcaster SRF.

But it was not entirely clear whether the 45 bee colonies had been completely wiped out, Bearth added. He currently assumes they have been severely weakened.

According to Bearth, a specialist laboratory detected the insecticide spinosad, which is used in agriculture, in the bee colonies. The cantonal veterinary officer does not believe the bees were deliberately poisoned.

“Bees travel over a wide area. Substances that may even have been used correctly in agriculture can, under certain circumstances, harm the bees,” Bearth said.

“Targeted measures are now being taken to try to ensure the long-term survival of the bee colonies,” he added. For example, different bee colonies could be merged.

It is currently unclear who used the plant protection product. According to Bearth, the relevant cantonal authority is investigating the matter.

More

Protecting pollinators enshrined in the Constitution

More

Swiss beekeepers want protecting pollinators to be enshrined in the constitution




This content was published on


Mar 1, 2026



They consider current measures to be insufficient in the face of the decline in these essential species.



Read more: Swiss beekeepers want protecting pollinators to be enshrined in the constitution


+ How we produce English news
Translated from German, reviewed by an English Department journalist. 

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