WASHINGTON (AP) — Winter hit U.S. honeybees hard with the highest loss rate yet, an annual survey of beekeepers showed.
The
annual nationwide survey by the Bee Informed Partnership found 37.7% of
honeybee colonies died this past winter, nearly 9 percentage points
higher than the average winter loss.
The
survey of nearly 4,700 beekeepers managing more than 300,000 colonies
goes back 13 years and is conducted by bee experts at the University of
Maryland, Auburn University and several other colleges.
Beekeepers
had been seeing fewer winter colony losses in recent years until now,
said Maryland's Dennis vanEngelsdorp, president of the bee partnership
and co-author of Wednesday's survey.
"The fact that we suddenly had the worst winter we've had ... is troubling," vanEngelsdorp said.
Some
bees usually die over winter, but until the past couple decades, when a
combination of problems struck colonies, losses rarely exceeded 10%, he
said.
Bees
pollinate $15 billion worth of U.S. food crops. One-third of the human
diet comes from pollinators, including native wild bees and other
animals, many of which are also in trouble, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
"We
should be concerned on multiple levels," said University of California,
Berkeley, agricultural social scientist Jennie Durant, who has a
separate study this week on loss of food supply for bees.
Year-to-year
bee colony losses, which include calculations for summer, were 40.7%,
higher than normal, but not a record high, the survey found.
"The
beekeepers are working harder than ever to manage colonies but we still
lose 40-50% each year... unacceptable," Swiss bee expert Jeff Pettis,
who wasn't part of the survey, said in an email.
Read more: https://www.usnews.com/news/news/articles/2019-06-19/survey-sees-biggest-us-honeybee-winter-die-off-yet
Read more: https://www.usnews.com/news/news/articles/2019-06-19/survey-sees-biggest-us-honeybee-winter-die-off-yet
No comments:
Post a Comment