Are honey
bees in danger of extinction?
Are honey bees declining?
Are honey bees becoming rare?
Why are people concerned abut honey bees?
It is now some years since I first started campaigning for bees, and the debate has moved on significantly. Yet, there is still some confusion, as to the original alarms that were and are still being raised. Thus, questions like those above remain common.
As I write, it’s October 2019.
Here is a
summary of the situation, along with an explanation as to why the debate and
campaign evolved in the way that it did.
No.
However, the alarm was raised by beekeepers because of what was happening to so
many honey bee colonies that were managed, such as:
These issues were most frequently noted among beekeepers who
had offered pollination services on fields where neonicotinoids were used, and
also among beekeepers whose hives happened to be close to areas that had been
treated with neonicotinoids.
To an extent, losses of managed honey bee colonies can be
offset by raising more colonies – although these too could be put into danger,
if for example, they are kept on an insecticide treated field or encounter diseases
they cannot fight.
In addition, so many people were concerned about what was
happening to honey bees, that in some countries, more people took up beekeeping
for the first time – prior to this, beekeeping as a hobby had been in
freefall. This has resulted in more
beekeepers and more colonies.
However, problems continue in a large part in colonies that are exposed to insecticides.
The problems highlighted above by beekeepers remain very important, because they
clearly indicate that something is wrong that needs to be put right.
Merely breeding more honey bees is only a
short term sticking plaster approach that does not deal with the underlying causes
of the problems.
Wild bees and pollinators most definitely need our support to reverse declines.
Wild bees have been declining for many years. Some like to claim it’s partly the faulty of honey bees. This is nonsense – beekeeping as a hobby had been in freefall for many years, but wild pollinators did not increase in numbers during this period.
Conversely, wild bee populations declined further during that period, and there have been a number of extinctions.
The reason for wild bee decline is primarily habitat loss, urbanization,
insecticide use and industrial farming practices.
In some cases, disease has also caused concern, for example nosema (which may be linked to neonicotinoids) and disease spread in bumble bees from commercially reared bumble bee species.
The problems experienced by wild bees and pollinators can be
traced to human activity.
Human activity
can do a tremendous amount to reverse that decline. Providing food for bees in the form of plants
in your garden and not using insecticides, will help wild bees and pollinators tremendously.
The
reason why we should be interested in what is happening for honey bees is
because:
We should look after both, and be concerned about all of
them. Honey bees are vitally important
for the reasons I mention above, and are a beautiful and amazing species,
deserving of survival and existence.
Wild bees and pollinators are also exceptionally important.
Caring about one set of species does not make an enemy of the other.
With
increased noise and greater activity, the broader issues facing pollinators
generally, are more widely known. They remain
and always have been the same:
Whilst
honey bees are not in danger of extinction in the near future, they are vital
because environmental factors affecting honey bees are likely to affect wild
species, and with more devastating effects.
Honey bees are truly amazing, beautiful and extraordinary creatures. The continual and dedicated monitoring of honey bee colonies by beekeepers means that environmental dangers to wild pollinators are most likely to be noted and raised by beekeepers first.