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Ecocentric

The Trouble with Beekeeping in the Anthropocene

The beepocalypse is on the cover of TIME, but it looks like managed honeybees will still pull through. Wild bees—and wild species in general—won't be so lucky in a human-dominated planet

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Allan Baxter via Getty Images

Besides being a handy symbol of environmental decline, the honeybee also does some pollination

I’ve written this week’s cover story for the magazine, on the growing threat to honeybees. You can read it (with a subscription) over here. The short version: beginning nearly a decade ago, honeybees started dying off at unusually and mysteriously high rates—this past winter, nearly one-third of U.S. honeybee colonies died or disappeared. At first this appeared due to something called colony collapse disorder (CCD); hives would be abandoned without warning, with bees seemingly leaving honey and intact wax behind. The apocalyptic nature of CCD—some people really thought the disappearance of the bees indicated that the Rapture was nigh—grabbed the public’s attention. More recently, beekeepers have been seeing fewer cases of CCD proper, but honeybees keep dying and bees keep collapsing. That’s bad for our food system—bees add at least $15 billion in crop value through pollination in the U.S. alone, and if colony losses keep up, those pollination demands may not be met and valuable crops like almonds could wither.

More than the bottom line for grocery stores, though, the honeybee’s plight alarms us because a species that we have tended and depended on for thousands of years is dying—and we don’t really know why. Tom Theobald, a beekeeper and blogger who has raised the alarm about CCD, put that fear this way: “The bees are just the beginning.”

(PHOTOS: The Bee, Magnified: Microscopic Photography by Rose-Lynn Fisher)

But while we don’t now we exactly what causes CCD or why honeybees are dying in larger numbers, we do know the suspects: pesticides, including the newer class of neonicotinoids that seem to affect bees even at very low levels; biological threats like the vampiric Varroa mite; and the lack of nutrition thanks to monocultures of commodity crops like wheat and corn, which offer honeybees little in the way of the pollen they need to survive. Most likely, bee deaths are due to a mix of all of those menaces acting together—pesticides and lack of food might weaken honeybees, and pests like Varroa could finish them off, spreading diseases the bees don’t have the strength to resist. Unfortunately, that means there’s no simple way to save the honeybees either. Simply banning, say, neonicotinoids might take some of the pressure off honeybees, but most scientists agree it wouldn’t solve the problem. (And getting rid of neonicotinoids would have unpredictable consequences for agriculture—the pesticides were adopted in part because they are considered safer for mammals, including human beings.) Honeybees are suffering because we’ve created a world that is increasingly inhospitable to them.

Still, for all the alarm, honeybees are likely to pull through. As I point out in the magazine piece, beekeepers have mostly managed to replace lost colonies, though at a cost high enough that some long-time beekeepers are getting out of the business altogether. Beekeepers are buying new queens and splitting their hives, which cuts into productivity and honey production, but keeps their colony numbers high enough to so far meet pollination demands. They’re adding supplemental feed—often sugar or corn syrup—to compensate for the lack of wild forage. The scientific and agricultural community is engaged—see Monsanto’s recent honeybee summit, and the company’s work on a genetic weapon against the Varroa mite. Randy Oliver, a beekeeper and independent researcher, told me that he could see honeybees becoming a feedlot animal like pigs or chickens, bred and kept for one purpose and having their food brought to them, rather than foraging in the semi-wild way they live now. That sounds alarming—and it’s not something anyone in the beekeeping industry would like to see—but it’s also important to remember that honeybees themselves aren’t exactly natural, especially in North America, where they were imported by European settlers in the 17th century. As Hannah Nordhaus, the author of the great book A Beekeeper’s Lament, has written, honeybees have always been much more dependent on human beings than the other way around.

(MORE: Behind the Bee’s Knees: The Origins of Nine Bee-Inspired Sayings)

The reality is that honeybees are very useful to human beings, and species that are very useful to us—think domesticated animals and pets—tend to do OK in the increasingly human-dominated world we call the Anthropocene. But other wild species aren’t so lucky—and that includes the thousands of species of wild bees and other non-domesticated pollinators. Bumblebees have experienced recent and rapid population loss in the U.S., punctuated by a mass pesticide poisoning in Oregon this past June that led to the deaths of some 50,000 bumblebees. A 2006 report by the National Academies of Science concluded that the populations of many other wild pollinators—especially wild bees—was trending “demonstrably downward.” The threats are much the same ones faced by managed honeybees: pesticides, lack of wild forage, parasites and disease. The difference is that there are thousands of human beings who make it their business to care for and prop up the populations of honeybees. No one is doing the same thing for wild bees. The supposed beepocalypse is on the cover of TIME magazine, but “you don’t hear about the decline of hundreds of species of wild bees,” says Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

That’s meant almost literally—we don’t hear them anymore. The plight of the bees illustrates our outsized influence on the this planet as we reshape it—consciously and not—to meet our immediate needs. But just because we have this power doesn’t mean we fully understand it, or our impact on our own world. We are a species that increasingly has omnipotence without omniscience. That’s a dangerous combination for the animals and plants that share this planet with us.  And eventually, it will be dangerous for us, too.

Subscribe here to read Bryan Walsh’s full TIME cover story on A World Without Bees. Already a subscriber? Read it here.

75 comments
JerrySchull
JerrySchull

So for those who believe in coincidences here's one.  In order to meet the demand for ethanol for fuel, non-food grade insect resistant corn started deployment in 2003.  Three years later we have an issue with bee's dying off. 

If I were a beekeeper I'd make sure that my bee's stayed far away from any fields that had the genetically modified corn.  So how far does a bee travel in their pollen cultivation mission?

Stupid idea to use a food crop for fuel production.  STUPID!

BDJUSA
BDJUSA

This article doesn't seem to mention the #1 bee killer suspect electromagnetic radiation from cell phones and other wireless devices. The electromagnetic radiation discombobulates the bees so they get lost and don't return to the hive, they they die. Electromagnetic radiation from cell phones also lowers their immune system making them very susceptible to disease.

Excerpt from an article:

 In general, the research in several different countries finds that the proximity to a hive of either a cell phone or a cell tower causes the hive to lose most of its worker bees–and in many cases, to collapse, sometimes within a surprisingly short period of time. 

“The navigation skill of the worker bees is dependent on the earth’s magnetic properties. The electromagnetic waves emitted by the mobile phones and relay towers interfere with the earth’s magnetism, resulting in the loss of the navigation capacity of the bee. Then it fails to come back.” 


SwiftrightRight
SwiftrightRight

@BDJUSA It also fails to mention the fact that aliens from Xenu are reported to be kidnapping bees all over the world and analy probing them.   After all I read in on teh webs so it must be true.

peterlborst1
peterlborst1 like.author.displayName 1 Like

> This article doesn't seem to mention the #1 bee killer suspect electromagnetic radiation

The reason: because that is not even one of the plausible causes. Certainly not #1! 

PLB

brenro12
brenro12

The Africanized honeybees around here seem to be doing just fine. Just stay away from their hives. They appear to be naturally resistant to the Varroa mite. Perhaps that's a trait that could be bred into native populations without the aggressive nature.

SwiftrightRight
SwiftrightRight

@brenro12 Because attempting to hybridize our bees with African bees worked so well last time we tried it...

peterlborst1
peterlborst1

Finally, more recent work published this summer (2013):

Pollinator declines: reconciling scales and implications for ecosystem services  Ignasi Bartomeus, Rachael Winfree. F1000 Research 2013, 2:146

This short article comes to the important conclusion that while declines in pollinator [bee] abundance at local and regional scales are generally consistent, these declines are not occurring among those species responsible for delivering the majority of pollination services to particular crops. This insight makes a valuable contribution to the recent debate on the implications of pollinator declines for food production and will hopefully spur more studies that look closely at the relative contribution of different species to delivering pollination services across different crop types, and how the abundance of these species has changed over time.

Reviewed by Gary Luck, Department of Wildlife Ecology and Management, Charles Sturt University, Albury, Australia  03 July 2013 

peterlborst1
peterlborst1

By way of corroboration of my claim that bees are NOT in decline, I offer this:

The prospect that a global pollination crisis currently threatens agricultural productivity has drawn intense recent interest among scientists, politicians, and the general public. To date, evidence for a global crisis has been drawn from regional or local declines in pollinators themselvesor insufficient pollination for particular crops. In contrast, our analysis of Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) data reveals that the global population of managed honey-bee hives has increased 45% during the last half century and suggests that economic globalization, rather than biological factors, drives both the dynamics of the global managed honey-bee population and increasing demands for agricultural pollination services. -- Marcelo A. Aizenand Lawrence D. Harder. IN : Current Biology 19, 915–918

In questioning this crisis, it becomes apparent that perceptions of a pollinator crisis are driven mainly by reported declines of crop-pollinating honeybees in North America, and bumblebees and butterflies in Europe, whereas native pollinator communities elsewhere show mixed responses to environmental change. Additionally, few staple food crops depend on pollinator services. Few major crop species depend on animal pollinators. Cereals, including wheat, rice and maize, are either wind pollinated, or their seed production does not require fertilization. Many fruit and seed crops require neither pollinators (e.g. lentils, groundnut and soya) nor pollination (e.g. bananas and figs) for production. Others are self-fertile, although animal pollination increases the quantity and quality of fruit production (e.g. oil-seed rape, sunflowers, cotton, pepper and tomatoes) -- Jaboury Ghazoul. IN: TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution Vol.20 No.7

Posted by Peter L Borst

peterloringborst.com

peterlborst1
peterlborst1

I would like to raise a voice against completely irresponsible journalism. The glaring headline: TIME Explains: Why Bees Are Going Extinct. Bees, let alone honey bees, are not going extinct. FAO estimates there are 500 million colonies of bees in the World. In the US, 30-40% are lost each winter. That is less than one million colonies. But -- and this is what journalists decline to say: this number is easily replenished in spring when beekeepers divide their hives. A skillful beekeeper can make one hive into many and increase his or her numbers every year. This is not to downplay the difficulty of keeping honey bees. But this difficulty is being offset somewhat by high prices for honey and pollination. As in any market, demand and high prices creates supply. But the worst part of all of this media hype is that various gloom and doom prognosticators have latched onto the honey bee as the poster child for all that they see wrong with the world. Bees are not going extinct, now or ever. The developed nations will continue to have plenty to eat and the third world will continue to be exploited. Check into reality once in a while.

Peter L Borst, Beekeeper for 40 years

Heckroth
Heckroth

Honeybees are profitable (at least until industrial agriculture can engineer more self-pollinating crops), so they may have a chance at survival in the anthropocene era.  Wild bees -- and wild everything else including wild humans -- are doomed to a page in a natural history text unless we change our ways.

I frequently hear that without synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, GMOs, CAFOs, cultivating formerly wild lands, and all manner of intensive agriculture, vast numbers of humans will OMG STARVE TO DEATH.  And yet the same people yammering on about how near to starvation we all are, KEEP BREEDING MORE as if the planet will continue to feed us all without limit.

With our intensive feedlot-style agriculture, we are fast becoming a race of feedlot-humans, far removed from the wild humans from which we're descended, and of which few small (but sustainable, if left alone) populations remain.  We're turning our beautiful planet into one giant CAFO, and the livestock is us.  Compacted into filthy disease-ridden cities just like feedlot animals, fed a calorie-dense but unhealthy diet (made possible by CAFOs and GMOs and driving wild animals and wild humans off their land) provided largely by machines (fewer humans to pay).  Our unhealthy diets and sedentary feedlot lifestyle make us sick.  Those who can afford it have doctors and nurses and drug makers who try to undo the damage that their brave new world causes.  Aside from ever-growing numbers of feedlot-humans, the only species that will remain if humanity continues on this course are those that are profitable (i.e. edible or otherwise useful) to feedlot-humans.

That might included honeybees if they remain profitable.  It probably won't include tigers (except for a few doomed to lives of misery, breeding more cute cubs for human entertainment and eventually pelts) so your grandkids will probably think the of the great cats the way they think of dragons or unicorns; something out of myth.  It definitely won't include obscure freshwater mollusks (no cuteness factor there to motivate humans to preserve them) so if they hold the key to curing cancer we'd better find it soon.

Small-picture, the anthropocene is a neat time to live.  The food is tasty even as it's killing me, and I like the internet.  But big-picture, I hate the anthropocene.  And I think it's headed for a big fall.  Would rather humanity let itself (and its vast numbers) down gently, but I fear they won't, and the end result will be messy and painful.  I hope I don't live to see it.


andthorne
andthorne

The bees are being killed by formaldehyde gas emerging from the snowpack as the sun rises. Most bee deaths, if not in the deep south, are  occurring at early spring  snow melts on the cusp of spring. The formaldehyde is also the cause of other extinctions bats , frogs large cats, turtles  etc In the case of the bees it is creating immunity problems and in large levels acidosis.

The large formaldehyde build up is from methane oxidation and it is reaching dangerous levels.  Formaldehyde is the Dracula of the daylight hours falling into water and snow a tnight and emerging in the day light hours.  I have the scientific reports for any reporter who would like to see them.

I believe it is now directly effecting our food supply i.e. the dying oranges. See

rocksinger45
rocksinger45 like.author.displayName 1 Like

Some of you people are real fools with your comments. Bee's are the first to realize and be killed by environmental pollution. Maybe as human being we can withstand the pollution but bee's can't. I walked through a well know park in Los Angeles everyday for about a year without seeing one and started thinking about the bee problem. Southern California has lots of crops that need to be pollinated and without bee's things will only get worse.

JohnLammi
JohnLammi

Too, too many people on the planet. And some people want to INCREASE the population of the US via immigration when we are already killing the environment here.

JessicaMyers
JessicaMyers

Maybe the bees are dying off because beekeepers are lazy? If you don't take proper care of your animals, they can die.

Beezerk
Beezerk

@JessicaMyers  

Have you ever met a beekeeper? Some of the most conscientious people I know. We are the ones who care the most about this issue. We work VERY hard for very little gain. Small beekeeps never return what they put into their hives. Eat your food in the AC & thank a beekeeper. I don't know a LAZY one.

ShawnLa
ShawnLa

I have several hives in my back yard. I keep them to help pollination of my garden, as well as helping everyone else's garden around me. The difference between now that I have my bees and before i had them is night and day. My garden exploded with fruit, berries and vegetables after i set up my hives. 


Anyone with a back yard could set up a bee hive for a few hundred dollars. They don't require much work, almost no work at all if you aren't collecting their extra honey.

gspieler
gspieler

@ShawnLa 

Hi Shawn. I'm a member of the Great Sunflower Project and count bees. I'm very interested in promoting bee health. I have a beed garden for my mini-orchard and would love to have a hive. However I thought it was very expensive and required a lot of equipment? I don't care about collecting honey and what you have said sounds really interesting to me? Where do I start? 

ShawnLa
ShawnLa

@gspieler@ShawnLa

Hello, 

A hive isn't actually very expensive. You can order the materials online (I had to I live out in the boonies) or purchase them from a local supply store. However, westernbee.com provides kits that you can assemble with a bit of work for a very reasonable price. You can buy a hive with 2 deeps (one deep is for the queen to lay eggs, the second for h oney and pollen storage to feed the hive) and 2 supers (smaller boxes and frames) for the extra honey that the bees produce. It takes a year or so for the bees to get settled in a new hive, reproduce from 10k bees that you get in a bee package, to a full 60-80k bees, draw out comb for eggs and storage etc. Online  you can get the entire hive for around 200 dollars

 Bees you can purchase online for 100-120 dollars.  All you need for tools is a hive tool, a veil, and a smoker. You don't need anything else really unless you are nervous around bees. I have yet to wear gloves, bees won't sting you unless you provoke them or harm them.

 If you want more info, email me at shawnmatthew@hotmail.com

tynkyr_belle
tynkyr_belle

Hey, I know - let's all pour on some more perfume and cologne, whose cancer-causing agents are kept secret from us by the cosmetics industry!  I'm sure bees like White Diamonds and Chanel #5!

Do you know when breast cancer rates started soaring?  The 70's - when the perfume industry started using more and more petro-organic chemicals to perfume and also when childhood asthma started increasing, as well.

Wear a pink ribbon and go for a walk - OR STOP USING PERFUME LIKE YOU'RE TRYING TO COVER YOUR NASTY BO.

Your choice.

MisterMeaner
MisterMeaner

@villandra24Before White folks shared technology with non-Whites, the non-Whites had a population far lower than it is today, due to disease, constant starvation and inter-tribal warfare. And even then, it was necessary for the tribes to continually be on the move, to find new sources of food and allow the environment to recover from the ecological damage done by the "natives." So how did the non-Whites manage to find enough to eat before we came along? A lot of times, they didn't.

ZoeyBrandia
ZoeyBrandia

@MisterMeaner @villandra24  

There so many things wrong this statement, I don't know where to begin. At best it is ignorance, at worst it is racist. Before whites, even came along, non whites were living, thriving and survivng for thousands of years. In fact, it can be said that these non-whites actually lived in harmony with nature whereas whites, with all of your technology is on the verge of destroying the whole planet. They didn't destroy the ecosystem they needed to survive unlike whites who clearly don't understand that. Your lust for greed and power is like a bottomless hole that can't be filled. You will stop at nothing even to your own demise to fill this black hole.

Intelligence without compassion, wisdom and empathy gets you nothing but nuclear bombs. The destruction of this planet can be blamed entirely on whites. You have manage more ways to destroy every living thing to satisfied your unrelenting greed. Everything you have come into contact with, you completely destroy or enslaved. You equate this with being the superior race when in fact it is the most evil race.

villandra24
villandra24 like.author.displayName 1 Like

I understand that honey bees were brought here from Europe, and that in Eurasia many fruit crops cannot occur without them, or alternatively manual pollination which has been done in China, where there is enough labor to have people actually manually pollinate the flowers on fruit trees.


So, please tell me.   How have people ever managed to live and find fruit to eat in Africa, and in the Americas before Europeans got here?   

ShawnLa
ShawnLa

@villandra24 

There are over 20,000 species of bees in the world. Some polinate some do not. Wasps don't pollinate, and aren't bees at all.

 Honeybees are unique as they produce a vast amount of honey, far more than they need, hence they are like domesticated cows of the insect world.

Most bees don't produce honey or if they do, produce small amounts of it.

ikewinski
ikewinski

@villandra24 There are many other species that are pollinators, including flies, wasps, bumblebees (native to the americas), bats, birds, etc. all pollinate too.

Other plants are wind-pollinated, like corn.

MisterMeaner
MisterMeaner

@ikewinski Yes, there are other pollinators like bats and stuff. But you should remember that not only were honey bees, nature's best pollinators, brought to America from the Old World by White folks, but a lot of the stuff we eat today (pollinated by both the wind and European honey bees) was also brought here by us. A partial list of foods brought to America by Europeans: almond, apple, apricot, banana, barley, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, cantaloupe, carrot, oranges, lemons, grapefruit, cucumber, figs, lettuce, mango, millet, oats, okra, olives, onions, peach, pea, pear, radish, rice, rye, soybean, sugarcane, turnips, wheat, walnuts, watermelon, yams.

eunice12
eunice12

The problem is overpopulation in every country in the world, so no chance of a coordinated government effort to educate people from having babies. Every country experiences species extinction every year, so no use blaming 3rd world countires.


SokrMom
SokrMom

The bees are NOT only the beginning. The demise of our ecosystem began decades ago. The only remaining question is the extent to which we humans are going to be able to slow or even stop the processes that are coming together, in the worst possible way, now--processes resulting from greenhouse gas emissions, as well as environmental contamination by chemical products, human and industrial waste, and the continuing threat of nuclear contamination from reactor meltdowns. Regardless of where the beginning was, the end will be the extinction of humanity itself, if we cannot get these problems under control.

eunice12
eunice12 like.author.displayName 1 Like

@SokrMom The problem is overpopulation in every country in the world, so no chance of a coordinated effort to stop birthing.

SokrMom
SokrMom

@eunice12 @SokrMom 

Overpopulation doesn't even required a coordinated effort. When birth control is made available, individual women are happy to stop having lots and lots of kids.

wadejburg
wadejburg

i'd say the problem is no one truly cares. money is all that matters and the rest is to much of an inconvenient truth, it will be too late and the land and food supply decimated before anyone of true power cares or recognizes the problem. Monsanto, Bayer, Dow. they are all to blame USDA,FDA, supreme court gmos its all right there. but more so its the consumers, eating your steak and potato every night without care or conscience.plant based organic foods is the only possible long term solution, perhaps the future is remembering the past and thousands of years of survival and flourishing before we destroyed it all for profit   

eunice12
eunice12

@wadejburg The reason all of what you said is true is 99% of the population lives in cities today, and has no clue where that steak comes from, other than comparing supermarket prices at Wal-Mart and Safeway. Wild overpopulation demands and requires GMO and monoculture farming to keep costs low and production up, since that is the only way to create enough food to feed them all.

katej841
katej841 like.author.displayName 1 Like

I maintain mason bees, also known as orchard bees, in my backyard.  Bought one nest about four years ago (easy to find through the internet, and sometimes locally), and a few bees found it.  Now have four nests filled with developing bees that will come out next spring for the early season pollinating (and I am going to need some more nests next spring....)  They are not aggressive (they nest singly, not in a  hive).  If you want to help native bee populations, this is one way to go about it (in addition to habitat, forage, etc...)

doubleSteve
doubleSteve like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Commercial beekeepers can split hives, raise queens, selectively breed mite & disease resistant colonies, treat for mites, feed when honey supplies run low and a wide range of other activities that wild native bees can't and they still lose huge numbers of hives each year.

Even Monsanto has realized that the collapse of commercial honeybee colonies will hurt their business so they're dumping money into research for these problems. However, they don't care about the native polinators and there's no one out there to help them. They'll either adapt or go extinct.

The problem isn't pesticides, or GMO foods, or monoculture or shipping bees all over the country and feeding them high-fructose corn syrup, it's a combination of all of these things. Bees under stress are more susseptible to disease, less capable to fight off mites, bees that don't get a well rounded diet have the same issues. 

eunice12
eunice12

@doubleSteve The reason for the combos that you list is because of a wildly overpopulated country that demands cheap food. So you are right, don't blame Monsanto for supplying the only method to produce it - blame yourself.

FactChecker2
FactChecker2

@doubleSteve One comment should be restated: "They'll either adapt or go extinct."  The wild bees can not possibly adapt fast enough to make a difference.  If there is not already enough genetic variety to allow some to survive, they will all die.  Nature must "adapt" before the fact by evolving enough variety so that some varieties will survive.

TracyLupejkis
TracyLupejkis like.author.displayName 1 Like

The problem is caused by pesticides in Monsanto genetically modified crops and this article ridiculously cites Monsanto's work in eradicating a mite the bees have always co existed with.

CourtneyJaeb
CourtneyJaeb

@TracyLupejkis Have any research to back that up?

Monsantos only pesticide producing item is BT producing crops, which are not linked to CCD.

It's neonicotinoids that are the main culprit at the moment, and Monsanto does not create or sell any neonicotinoid pesticides.

Go yell at Bayer CropScience, then you'd have an argument.


Edymnion
Edymnion

You know its funny, because in reality the decline in beehives started back in the early 90's, and ever since CCD was identified the bee population has increased.

http://qz.com/101585/everyone-calm-down-there-is-no-bee-pocalypse/#

But please, don't let silly little things like facts get in the way of your scare tactic article.

Beezerk
Beezerk

@Edymnion

I've read this article & it's a bunch of BS. Look at the charts. I'm seeing a decline in colonies & honey.

In 1999 there were 2.69 million colonies producing honey totaling 205 million pounds

In 2012 there were 2.62 million colonies producing honey totaling 147 million pounds

eunice12
eunice12

@Edymnion You missed the point the article makes that wild bees will die off. The article also says honey bees will probably survive.

TracyLupejkis
TracyLupejkis like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

@Edymnion No, it has not increased since the '90s.  You cite one article from one researcher, from The Property and Environment Rrsearch Center, who's board is made up of bankers and one genetecist.