PACE Preliminary Report (2023): Lifetune Room Resonator Improves Bee Colony Survivability and Eliminates Varroa Mite Infestation in Quebec and Ontario Field Study

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PACE Preliminary Report (2023): Lifetune Room Resonator Improves Bee Colony Survivability and Eliminates Varroa Mite Infestation in Quebec and Ontario Field Study

PACE Preliminary Report (2023): Lifetune Room Resonator and Bee Colony Dynamics

Author: Dr. A. Michrowski
Organization: Planetary Association for Clean Energy (PACE) — NGO in Special Consultative Status with the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Date: March 24, 2023
Study period: 2022 honey production season
Scope: 14 beekeepers, 15 locations across Western Quebec, Eastern and Western Ontario
Device tested: Lifetune Room (fractal-matrix Aires resonator)
Status: Preliminary research report

Purpose of the Study

This investigative research, commissioned through the Planetary Association for Clean Energy, sought to determine whether the Aires Lifetune Room resonator influences bee colony survivability under conditions of electromagnetic field exposure, Varroa mite infestation, and pesticide stress. The study was initiated in response to concerns about colony collapse disorder and the documented sensitivity of honeybees to electromagnetic radiation.

Study Design

Fourteen beekeepers across 15 varied sites (prairie fields, valleys, mountain terrain, dense forest, and one wind farm site) participated across the 2022 season. Sites were selected to capture diverse environmental and electromagnetic conditions.

At the end of the 2021 season, participating beekeepers agreed to record colony issues as a pre-study baseline. In Spring 2022, they installed Lifetune Room units in their beehive areas, orienting units along the magnetic North/South axis to optimize the fractal-matrix stabilizing effect.

Each site received a full-spectrum (60 Hz – 100 GHz) electromagnetic field survey, monitoring for radar operations, high-voltage lines, static electric and magnetic anomalies, and other environmental factors. During the 2022 season, beekeepers reported observations on any modifications in colony condition. Real-time observations of bee queen behavior in reaction to resonator positioning were noted during survey visits.

Key Findings

General colony health: Results were generally positive across the participating sites. Some locations reported not-yet-conclusive changes attributable to local microclimate factors.

Colony overcrowding and reproduction: At environmentally favorable sites (low EMF, no Varroa mites, no pesticide exposure), colonies thrived to the point of overcrowding — prompting natural swarming and colony subdivision. New colonies formed through swarming were subsequently observed by some beekeepers to be fitter than the parent colony. This was an unexpected outcome for multiple operators.

Varroa mite elimination: A particularly striking observation: once the Lifetune device was positioned for a beehive, existing Varroa mites began dying at an accelerated rate, with the hive remaining mite-free within 3 days. The mechanism underlying this effect was not determined within the scope of this preliminary study. The authors note this finding deserves thorough investigation by experts in the field.

Chemical pesticide interaction: One community demonstration site established by a beekeeper at a City Hall park survived until the municipal gardener sprayed the surrounding terrain — demonstrating clearly that the Lifetune resonator system does not protect against chemical pesticides. This is an important limitation confirmed by the study.

Winter survival: At one large operation (over 100 beehives), a beehive survived the entire winter with no colony death, buzzing with life when found in early spring. A neighboring beekeeper without a Lifetune system, located a few kilometers away, lost 5 colonies over the same winter period.

Crop fertility (sideline observation): Some beekeepers noted greater apparent fertility in nearby garden crops; the report characterizes this as a sideline observation, not deterministic.

Economic results: The 2022 season was economically encouraging for participants, partly attributed to favorable weather. All participating beekeepers expressed a desire to continue exploring the Lifetune influence on bee colonies in greater depth.

Conclusion

In the assessment of Dr. Michrowski and PACE: "This study indicates that the influence of the Lifetune resonator technology does enable bee colony survivability in an impressive manner."

The study is characterized as preliminary. Findings regarding Varroa mite elimination are described as requiring further detailed study. The positive colony survivability results were consistent across geographically diverse sites and environmental conditions.

About PACE

The Planetary Association for Clean Energy (PACE) is an international scientific organization that has held Special Consultative Status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) since 1981. PACE conducts environmental and energy research and issues expert assessments that have been cited by UN agencies. Dr. A. Michrowski is a longtime Scientific Advisor to American Aires Inc. and serves on the company's board. See also: PACE Expert Opinion on the Serov Method (2019).

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