Ten years after the crisis, what is happening to our bees?

Bees are vital, not just for honey but pollinating around one-third of our edible plants. So how are Australia - and the world's - bees going?

Bees honeycomb

The health and populations of bee colonies is crucial to our own species. Source: go elsewhere... via Flickr

Ten years ago, beekeepers in the United States raised the alarm that thousands of their hives were mysteriously empty of bees. What followed was global concern over a new phenomenon: .
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Since then we have realised that it was not just the US that was losing its honey bees; have manifested all over the world. To make things worse, we are also losing many of our populations of wild bees too.

Losing bees can have tragic consequences, for us as well as them. Bees are pollinators for about one-third of the plants we eat, a service that has been valued at worldwide.

Ten years after the initial alarm, what is the current status of the world’s bee populations, and how far have we come towards understanding what has happened?

The current status of bees worldwide

Since the alarm was first raised, many countries have created new monitoring methods to judge the status of their bee stocks. As a result we have much more data on bee populations, although coverage is still patchy and differences in survey methods make it hard to compare between continents.

It is clear that bees in the United States are still struggling. Beekeepers can tolerate up to 15 per cent losses of colonies over winter, but the US is massively above this threshold, having over the 2015-16 winter.

Canada, by contrast, reported . This is better, but still above the level of losses at which beekeepers can easily restock.

Only recently have we had data from central Europe. There, honey bees seem to be doing better: in 2015-16. Meanwhile, in New Zealand surveys only began in the last year and have reported . Australia does not yet have a countrywide survey of the state of bee colonies.
crumpets with honey
Source: SBS Food
How sweet it is: a !

 

Honey bees are not the only bees that we should care about: are . Some plants are pollinated by only one wild bee species, such as the that forage on the loosetrife plant.

Unsurprisingly, we have much less data on wild bees than honey bees, and those data we do have point to bigger concerns. For our wild bees we only really have good data for populations that are endangered or that have completely disappeared. Between 2008 and 2013, wild bee diversity in the US , and a previously common bumblebee species was recently .

Do we understand why?

The good news is that the past decade has seen plenty of progress in understanding the mystery of Colony Collapse Disorder. The bad news is that we now recognise it as a , although that doesn’t mean it is unsolvable.

For all bees, foraging on flowers is a hard life. It is energetically and cognitively demanding; bees have to travel large distances to collect pollen and nectar from sometimes hard-to-find flowers, and return it all to the nest. To do this they need finely tuned senses, spatial awareness, learning and memory.

Anything that damages such skills can make bees struggle to find food, or even get lost while trying to forage. A bee that cannot find food and make it home again is as good as dead.

Because of this, bee populations are very vulnerable to what we call “sublethal stressors” – factors that don’t kill the bees directly but can hamper their behaviour.

In a , we argue that modern agriculture and industry have created a host of sublethal stressors that damage bees’ cognition. For example, and both reduce bees’ foraging efficiency by disturbing chemical communications in their brains. Modern intensive agriculture , which impairs their brain. interferes with the relationship between bees and the plants on which they feed.

In addition, managed honey bees are afflicted by a range of pests, viruses and predators that have been spread around the world as a side-effect of international trade. The worst is the ominously named , which causes brain development disorders.

What can we do?

At the global level, to preserve our bees we have to improve the environments in which they collect food. Every small action can make a difference. Planting flower borders with in your garden can provide food for both wild and domestic bees. You can reduce or eliminate the use of herbicides or pesticides when gardening. Even can help bees out.

You could install a or . Another tempting option is to buy local honey, which often has a more distinctive flavour than mass-produced versions.

In Australia, we are fortunate in that our bees seem to be doing better than many other parts of the world. The Varroa mite has not yet invaded our shores, and in many areas bees can access pesticide-free bushland (although unlike Europe, Australia has ).
Australia also has an incredibly rich diversity of wild native bees: , including our emblematic stingless bees. Even so, to protect this diversity we need better surveys of how these species are doing.

Ten years on from the alarm over disappearing bees, it is fair to say we now know the nature of the problem and what can be done to fix it. It’s up to us to take the steps needed to sustain these precious pollinators of our food for the future.

, Doctorant, and , Associate Professor, . This article was originally published on . Read the .

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6 min read
Published 9 May 2017 10:22am
Updated 20 September 2019 2:14pm
By Simon Klein
Source: The Conversation


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