A vaccine for bees has an unexpected effect.
A vaccine for bees has an unexpected effect.
Honeybees vaccinated against a bacterial disease were also protected from a viral disease.
Testing the vaccine wasn’t easy. One larvae-producing site in Florida was hit by a hurricane, “another was taken out by bears,” Swift said.
Scientific proof that vaccines cause hurricanes and bears.
This is the first time I've heard of a vaccine against bacterial infection.
54 1 ReplyNever heard of vaccines against bacteria? Meningococcal vaccine? Diptheria vaccine? Tetanus vaccine? Typhoid vaccine? Surely heard of one of these
13 0 ReplyAlways associated vaccines with viruses. I guess i never really thought about it.
8 0 Reply
It's the same immune system that fights those off, too. There are many vaccines for bacterial infections, like cholera and typhoid. Intracellular bacteria don't have many vaccines, but they exist too. I'm no doc though so if you want to know more, it'd be worth a search.
8 0 ReplyThe bears can smell the vaccinations.
7 1 ReplyYou hear that, Ron? Bears. Now you're putting the whole hive at risk!
7 0 Reply
First there were sharknados, now there are bearicanes. Where will it end?
2 0 Reply
The unexpected effect is that the vaccine, made to help fight off a type of bacteria, also helps against a virus. So it was a better result than expected.
31 0 ReplyI wish we could get immunized via candy, might be fewer anti-vaxxers.
11 2 ReplyWould make for some interesting Halloween conspiracy theories.
6 0 Reply
Why the clickbait? Just put the unexpected effect in the title
9 0 ReplyI want a vaccine against bees and wasps. Not in nature; for me personally, so they leave me the hell alone.
5 0 Reply