Current:Home > MarketsHoneybee deaths rose last year. Here's why farmers would go bust without bees -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Honeybee deaths rose last year. Here's why farmers would go bust without bees
PredictIQ Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-03-11 04:47:42
If you like to eat blueberries, apples, almonds and other fruits that require pollination, you can thank a honeybee. Farmers could not grow these crops without the essential service bees provide.
"We depend on honeybees for our existence," says Hail Bennett of Bennett Orchards in Frankford, Del., which has just opened its fields to u-pick visitors for peak season.
Each spring, just as his blueberry bushes are flowering, Bennett rents loads of bees from a commercial beekeeper. For three weeks, the bees buzz around, moving millions of grains of pollen within and between flowers to pollinate the plants.
"It's pretty amazing how much work the bees have to do," Bennett says. There are millions of flowers on his 6 acres of blueberries, and "each flower has to be visited six to eight times by a honeybee in order to be fully pollinated," Bennett explains as he splits open a plump berry to inspect its seeds.
"You want to have at least 15 seeds in the fruit, Bennett says, looking approvingly as he counts them. "That tells you the flower was adequately pollinated in the spring," he says.
Bennett recalls hearing stories about the collapse of honeybee colonies when he was in high school. Across the country bees were disappearing from their hives. Now, a new survey of beekeepers finds bees are still struggling.
"Over the entire year, we estimate that beekeepers lost 48.2 % of their colonies," says Dan Aurell, a researcher at Auburn University's bee lab, which collaborates with the nonprofit Bee Informed Partnership to perform the survey.
The report covers the period between April 2022 and April 2023 and included 3,006 beekeepers from across the U.S. This year's count marks the second-highest estimated loss rate since 2010 to 2011, when the survey started recording annual losses.
"This is absolutely a concern," Aurell says. "This year's loss rates do not amount to a massive spike in colony deaths, but rather a continuation of worrisome loss rates."
"It's bad," says former USDA research scientist Jeff Pettis, in regard to the survey findings. "It shows beekeepers are still being affected by a number of challenges," he says. Beekeepers are finding they need to work harder to maintain their colonies, says Pettis, who is the president of Apimondia, an international federation of beekeepers associations.
"A major concern for bees is the Varroa mite," Pettis says. It's a small parasite that feeds on bees and makes it difficult for them to stay healthy. "It shortens their lifespan," Pettis says. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Varroa is an invasive species that originated in Asia, and Pettis says beekeepers can use organic acids and other synthetic products to protect their bees.
Pettis keeps bees on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, where he's had some success using formic acid to treat against Varroa mites. "The organic acids are effective, but they do take time and money," Pettis says.
Other challenges bees face are beyond the control of any one beekeeper, Pettis says. They include the use of pesticides, a loss of nutrition sources for honeybees due to urbanization, or land use practices leading to fewer and less diverse food sources, such as wild flowers.
There's also a concern that can seem hidden in plain sight — climate change. "When you layer on the big, broad issues of climate change, bees are really struggling," Pettis says.
Blueberry farmer Hail Bennett says he aims to be a good steward of the land. He invited a hobbyist beekeeper, Steven Reese, to set up on his farm, which could help some of their visitors learn how crucial bees are to his operation, and to agriculture overall.
Reese is retired from the Air Force and now works as a civilian for the Army. He says beekeeping is relaxing for him, almost a form of meditation. He says it is work to manage his bees, but he's been able to maintain his numbers, and grow his colonies, by dividing hives when some of the bees die. "If I left them feral, so to speak, and allowed them to survive on their own, it would be a much higher loss rate," so the effort is worth it, he says.
Reese says bees never cease to amaze him, with their hive instincts and sophisticated ways of organizing themselves. "They communicate in phenomenal ways," he says.
For farmer Hail Bennett, the bee is paramount. Without bees there are no blueberries.
"It's important for people to understand and remember where their food comes from," Bennett says.
veryGood! (7549)
Related
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Iconic Olmsted Parks Threatened Around the Country by All Manifestations of Climate Change
- Delivery drivers want protection against heat. But it's an uphill battle
- A New Shell Plant in Pennsylvania Will ‘Just Run and Run’ Producing the Raw Materials for Single-Use Plastics
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- New York City Begins Its Climate Change Reckoning on the Lower East Side, the Hard Way
- How to Watch the 2023 Emmy Nominations
- Summer School 2: Competition and the cheaper sneaker
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Study: Higher Concentrations Of Arsenic, Uranium In Drinking Water In Black, Latino, Indigenous Communities
Ranking
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Microplastics Pervade Even Top-Quality Streams in Pennsylvania, Study Finds
- Inside Kelly Preston and John Travolta's Intensely Romantic Love Story
- Las Vegas could break heat record as millions across the U.S. endure scorching temps
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- A punishing heat wave hits the West and Southwest U.S.
- 3 lessons past Hollywood strikes can teach us about the current moment
- Zayn Malik Makes Rare Comment About His and Gigi Hadid's Daughter Khai in First Interview in 6 Years
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
El Niño will likely continue into early 2024, driving even more hot weather
Blockbuster drug Humira finally faces lower-cost rivals
At the UN Water Conference, Running to Keep Up with an Ambitious 2030 Goal for Universal Water Rights
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
These farmworkers thought a new overtime law would help them. Now, they want it gone
The White House and big tech companies release commitments on managing AI
Puerto Rico Hands Control of its Power Plants to a Natural Gas Company