Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumWe now have to feed starving bees. What we have done to the ecosystem!!!
Last edited Sat Mar 28, 2026, 08:22 PM - Edit history (1)
Thank you University of Oxford! ðð
— ElleO ðºð¸ðºð¦ð¨ð¦ð²ð½ (@ellohhlo.bsky.social) 2026-03-28T14:59:06.005Z
SheltieLover
(80,379 posts)Cirsium
(3,938 posts)About 25 years ago in the orchard, I noticed two things. Warm spells in midwinter would bring the bees out, and there was nothing for them. And year by year, there were fewer native plants in bloom around the orchards to serve as a supplemental food source. Weaker bees are more susceptible to disease.
The Washington State University study isnt saying that we suddenly have to feed bees because nature has failed. Beekeepers have been supplement-feeding bees for a long time thats not new. What the study shows is that a better, more complete feed improves colony health, with more bees and brood and significantly lower winter losses. In other words, its an improvement to an existing management practice, not the discovery of a new emergency.
European honeybees, an introduced species in North America that can place stresses on local ecosystems, are already managed like livestock, especially in large-scale agriculture. Supplemental feeding isnt new this is just a better version of it.
It probably says as much about how we farm as it does about the bees.
The claim is often made that our food supply depends on European honeybees. Thats an overstatement. Theyre important for some crops, but far from the whole picture. No crops depend exclusively on European honeybees. Some business models do especially in large-scale monoculture systems.
Grain crops are wind-pollinated. Many others tomatoes, melons, squash are pollinated by native bees, especially bumblebees. Even in crops often associated with European honeybees for maximum yield per acre, pollination is not exclusive. Native pollinators play a critical role there as well, particularly in tree fruits and nuts. Bumblebees alone pollinate more than 25 important crops cranberries, blueberries, strawberries, plums, zucchini, melons, sweet peppers, tomatoes along with seed crops like alfalfa, red clover, cotton, and sunflower.
The decline of native pollinators in North America is probably a far greater concern than the condition of European honeybees.
littlemissmartypants
(33,455 posts)The theme was bees and blueberries. The team did some research and found out, according to someone, supposedly the more times that a pollinator visits a bloom the sweeter the fruit becomes. I believe it. I wish I had the reference for that study now.
Birds are responsible for pollination, too. We're losing them at alarming rates worldwide.
Frankly, I'm concerned about the natural world writ large.
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