ast winter, commercial beekeepers lost more than 60% of their colonies – their worst losses on record. We tend to blame bee losses on separate, singular threats: pests, pesticides, habitat loss or extreme weather. But we’ve been thinking about bee losses wrong.
The real culprit is our industrial food system.
Managed honeybees are in effect gig workers, the tiniest hired laborers in agriculture. They contribute more than $15bn to the US food system, and – along with native bees and other pollinators – help pollinate more than 130 types of fruits, nuts and vegetables in the US. To accomplish this feat each year, bees are trucked cross-country from one crop to the next, constantly fed supplements, bred for productivity, exposed to pesticides and pushed to pollinate on a schedule. This kind of management is grueling for beekeepers – and as we mark National Pollinator Week, it’s pushing bees to the brink.
California’s annual almond bloom offers a prime example. Each February, beekeepers truck more than 2m bee colonies to the state, more than 95% of the country’s commercial colonies, to pollinate 1.4m acres of blooming almonds. It’s the largest, most concentrated pollination event in the world – what’s been referred to as the Super Bowl of beekeeping.
If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went. (Will Rogers)
the wild, cruel beast is not behind the bars of the cage. he is in front of it - axel munthe
"Never doubt that a small group of dedicated citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." Margaret Mead
Until every cage is empty. Until every animal is free
יש מלאכים שהצמיחו פרווה במקום כנפיים
התחברות אל בע"ח במקום לשלוט בהם מרוממת אותנו לכוכבים (ברברה קלו הנד)