Reports of
honeybees rapidly disappearing are greatly exaggerated
By Paul
Driessen
Activist groups continue to promote scary stories that honeybees
are rapidly disappearing, dying off at “mysteriously high rates,” potentially
affecting one-third of our food crops and causing global food shortages. Time magazine says readers need to contemplate
“a world without bees,” while other “mainstream media” articles have sported
similar headlines.
The Pesticide Action Network and NRDC are leading campaigns
that claim insecticides, especially neonicotinoids, are at least “one of
the key factors,” if not the principle or sole reason for bee die-offs.
Thankfully, the facts tell a different story – two stories,
actually. First, most bee populations and most managed hives are doing fine,
despite periodic mass mortalities that date back over a thousand years. Second,
where significant depopulations have occurred, many suspects have been
identified, but none has yet been proven guilty, although researchers are
closing in on several of them.
Major bee die-offs have been reported as far back as 950,
992 and 1443 AD in Ireland.
1869 brought the first recorded case of what we now call “colony collapse
disorder,” in which hives full of honey are suddenly abandoned by their bees. More
cases of CCD or “disappearing disease” have been reported in recent decades,
and a study by bee researchers Robyn Underwood and Dennis vanEngelsdorp
chronicles more than 25 significant
bee die-offs between 1868 and 2003. However, contrary to activist campaigns
and various news stories, both wild and managed bee
populations are stable or growing worldwide.
Beekeeper-managed honeybees, of
course, merit the most attention, since they pollinate many important food
crops, including almonds, fruits and vegetables. (Wheat, rice and corn, on the
other hand, do not depend at all on animal pollination.) The number of managed
honeybee hives has increased some 45% globally since 1961, Marcelo Aizen and
Lawrence Harder reported
in Current Biology – even though
pesticide overuse has decimated China’s
bee populations.
Even
in Western Europe, bee populations are gradually but steadily increasing.
The trends are similar in other regions around the world, and much of the
decline in overall European bee populations is due to a massive drop in managed
honeybee hives in
Eastern Europe, after subsidies ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union. In fact, since neonicotinoid pesticides
began enjoying widespread use in the 1990s, overall bee declines appear to be
leveling off or have even diminished.
Nevertheless, in response to
pressure campaigns, the EU banned neonics – an action that could well make
matters worse, as farmers will be forced to use older, less effective, more
bee-lethal insecticides like pyrethroids. Now environmentalists want a similar
ban imposed by the EPA in the United
States.
That’s a terrible idea. The
fact is, bee populations tend to fluctuate, especially by region, and “it’s
normal for a beekeeper to lose part of his hive over the winter months,” notes University of Montana bee scientist Dr. Jerry
Bromenshenk. Of course, beekeepers want to minimize such losses, to avoid
having to replace too many bees or hives before the next pollination season
begins. It’s also true that the United
States did experience a 31% loss in managed
bee colonies during the 2012-2013 winter season, according to the US Agriculture
Department.
Major losses in beehives year
after year make it hard for beekeepers to turn a profit, and many have left the
industry. “We can replace the bees, but we can’t replace beekeepers with 40
years of experience,” says Tim Tucker, vice president of the American
Beekeeping Federation. But all these are different issues from whether bees are
dying off in unprecedented numbers, and what is causing the losses.
Moreover, even 30% losses do
not mean bees are on the verge of extinction. In fact, “the number of managed
honeybee colonies in the United
States has remained stable over the past 15
years, at about 1.5 million” – with 20,000 to 30,000 bees per hive – says Bryan
Walsh, author of the Time article.
That’s far fewer than the 5.8
million managed US hives in 1946. But this largely reflects competition from
cheap imported honey from China
and South America and “the general rural depopulation of the US over the
past half-century,” Walsh notes. Extensive truck transport of managed hives, across
many states and regions, to increasingly larger orchards and farms, also played
a role in reducing managed hive numbers over these decades.
CCD cases began spiking in the
USA
in 2006, and beekeepers reported losing 30-90% of the bees in many hives. Thankfully,
incidents of CCD are declining, and the mysterious phenomenon was apparently
not a major factor over the past winter. But researchers are anxious to figure
out what has been going on.
Both Australia and Canada rely heavily on
neonicotinoid pesticides. However, Australia’s honeybees are doing so
well that farmers are exporting queen bees to start new colonies around the
world; Canadian hives are also thriving. Those facts suggest that these
chemicals are not a likely cause. Bees are also booming in Africa,
Asia and South America.
However, there definitely are
areas where mass mortalities have been or remain a problem. Scientists and
beekeepers are trying hard to figure out why that happens, and how future
die-offs can be prevented.
Walsh’s article suggests
several probable culprits. Topping his list is the parasitic Varroa
destructor mite that has ravaged
U.S.
bee colonies for three decades. Another is American foulbrood bacteria that
kill developing bees. Other suspects include small hive beetles, viral
diseases, fungal infections, overuse of miticides, failure of beekeepers to
stay on top of colony health, or even the stress of colonies constantly being
moved from state to state. Yet another might be the fact that millions of acres
are planted in monocultures – like corn, with 40% of the crop used for ethanol,
and soybeans, with 12% used for biodiesel – creating what Walsh calls “deserts”
that are devoid of pollen and nectar for bees.
A final suspect is the parasitic phorid fly, which lays
eggs in bee abdomens. As larvae grow inside the bees, literally eating them
alive, they affect the bees’ ability to function and cause them to walk around
in circles, disoriented and with no apparent sense of direction. Biology
professor John Hafernik’s San
Francisco University
research
team said the “zombie-like” bees leave their hives at night, fly blindly
toward light sources, and eventually die. The fly larvae then emerge from the
dead bees.
The team found evidence of the
parasitic fly in 77% of the hives they sampled in the San
Francisco Bay area, and
in some South Dakota and Central Valley, California
hives. In addition, many of the bees, phorid flies and larvae contained genetic
traces from another parasite, as well as a virus that causes deformed wings.
All these observations have been linked to colony collapse disorder.
But because this evidence
doesn’t fit their anti-insecticide fund-raising appeals, radical
environmentalists have largely ignored it. They have likewise ignored strong evidence
that innovative neonicotinoid pest control
products do not harm bees when they are used properly. Sadly, activist noise has deflected public and regulator
attention away from Varroa mites,
phorid flies and other serious global threats to bees.
The good news is that the
decline in CCD occurrence has some researchers thinking it’s a cyclical malady that
is entering a downswing – or that colonies are developing resistance. The
bottom line is that worldwide trends show bees are flourishing. “A world without
bees” is not likely.
So now, as I said in a previous
article on this topic, we need to let science do its job, and not jump to
conclusions or short-circuit the process. We need answers, not scapegoats – or
the recurring bee mortality problem is likely to spread, go untreated or even get
worse.
See charts and additional information supplied below:
From http://www.daff.gov.au/animal-plant-health/pests-diseases-weeds/bee/honeybees-FAQs
-- What effect has Varroa had on the number of managed bee hives in
other countries?
Varroa
had no perceptible effect on the number of hives reported in Europe.
The number of honey bee hives in Europe declined sharply in the early 1990s,
coinciding with the end of communism, and the end of state support for
beekeepers, in the previously communist bloc countries of Eastern
Europe. The number of hives reported Western European countries
remained unchanged over the same period of time.
In
the United States
the number of managed hives declined steadily since the late 1940s, around 40
years before Varroa became established there. This decline reflects declining
terms of trade for United States
beekeepers as the result of competition with lower-cost honey producing
countries in South America. In contrast, due
to their competitive advantage, the number of hives in South
America has grown steadily since the mid-1970s, despite Varroa
already being established there. However, the J strain of V. destructor
in South America is less damaging than the K strain of V. destructor in
the United States.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For
A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and
author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power -
Black death.
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