Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on December 23, 2015

Bookmark and Share

Wild bee decline threatens US crop production

Wild bee abundance across the U.S.

Joshua E Brown University of Vermont Led by researchers from the University of Vermont, the first national study to map US wild bees suggests they’re disappearing in many of the country’s most important farmlands — including California’s Central Valley, the Midwest’s corn belt and the Mississippi River valley. If losses of these crucial pollinators continue, the new nationwide assessment indicates that farmers will face increasing costs — and that the problem may even destabilize the nation’s crop production. The findings were published December 21 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

KEY FINDINGS:
• Wild bee abundance decline likely in 23 percent of the contiguous US between 2008-2013.
• 39 percent of U.S. croplands that depend on pollinators face mismatch between rising demand for pollination and falling supply of wild bees.
• Wild bee declines may increase costs for farmers and, over time, could destabilize U.S. crop production.

Rising demand, falling supply

A research team led by Insu Koh (right) and Taylor Ricketts, bee experts at the University of Vermont’s Gund Institute for Ecological Economics, estimates that wild bee abundance between 2008 and 2013 declined in 23 percent of the contiguous US, potentially threatening crop production. UVM images.

The research team, led by Insu Koh at the University of Vermont, estimates that wild bee abundance between 2008 and 2013 declined in 23 percent of the contiguous U.S. The study also shows that 39 percent of U.S. croplands that depend on pollinators — from apple orchards to pumpkin patches — face a threatening mismatch between rising demand for pollination and a falling supply of wild bees.

In June of 2014, the White House issued a presidential memorandum warning that “over the past few decades, there has been a significant loss of pollinators, including honey bees, native bees, birds, bats, and butterflies.” The memo noted the multi-billion dollar contribution of pollinators to the U.S. economy — and called for a national assessment of wild pollinators and their habitats.

“Until this study, we didn’t have a national mapped picture about the status of wild bees and their impacts on pollination,” says Koh, a researcher at UVM’s Gund Institute for Ecological Economics (link is external) — even though each year more than $3 billion of the U.S. agricultural economy depends on the pollination services of native pollinators like wild bees.

Trouble zones

The report that followed the White House memo called for seven million acres of land to be protected as pollinator habitat over the next five years. “It’s clear that pollinators are in trouble,” says Taylor Ricketts, the senior author on the new study and director of UVM’s Gund Institute. “But what’s been less clear is where they are in the most trouble — and where their decline will have the most consequence for farms and food.”

“Now we have a map of the hotspots,” adds Koh. “It’s the first spatial portrait of pollinator status and impacts in the U.S.,” — and a tool that the researchers hope will help protect wild bees and pinpoint habitat restoration efforts.

The new study identifies 139 counties in key agricultural regions of California, the Pacific Northwest, the upper Midwest and Great Plains, west Texas, and the southern Mississippi River valley that have the most worrisome mismatch between falling wild bee supply and rising crop pollination demand. These counties tend to be places that grow specialty crops — like almonds, blueberries and apples — that are highly dependent on pollinators. Or they are counties that grow less dependent crops — like soybeans, canola and cotton — in very large quantities.

Of particular concern, the study shows that some of the crops most dependent on pollinators — including pumpkins, watermelons, pears, peaches, plums, apples and blueberries — have the strongest pollination mismatch, with a simultaneous drop in wild bee supply and increase in pollination demand. “These are the crops most likely to run into pollination trouble,” says Taylor Ricketts, “whether that’s increased costs for managed pollinators, or even destabilized yields.”

Pesticides, climate change, and diseases threaten wild bees — but the new study also shows that their decline may be caused by the conversion of bee habitat into cropland. In 11 key states where the new study shows bees in decline, the amount of land tilled to grow corn spiked by 200 percent in five years — replacing grasslands and pastures that once supported bee populations. “These results reinforce recent evidence that increased demand for corn in biofuel production has intensified threats to natural habitats in corn-growing regions,” the new study notes.

“By highlighting regions with loss of habitat for wild bees, government agencies and private organizations can focus their efforts at the national, regional, and state scales to support these important pollinators for more sustainable agricultural and natural landscapes,” says Michigan State University’s Rufus Isaacs, one of the co-authors on the study and leader of the Integrated Crop Pollination Project, a USDA-funded effort that supported the new research.

Over the last decade, honeybee keepers have lost many colonies and have struggled to keep up with rising demand for commercial pollination services, pushing up costs for farmers. “When sufficient habitat exists, wild bees are already contributing the majority of pollination for some crops. Even around managed pollinators, wild bees complement pollination in ways that can increase crop yields,” says Neal Williams, a co-author on the study from the University of California, Davis.

“Most people can think of one or two types of bee, but there are 4,000 species in the U.S. alone,” says Taylor Ricketts, Gund Professor in UVM’s Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources (link is external). “Wild bees are a precious natural resource we should celebrate and protect. If managed with care, they can help us continue to produce billions of dollars in agricultural income and a wonderful diversity of nutritious food.”

Making the maps

The team of seven researchers — from UVM, Franklin and Marshall College, University of California at Davis, and Michigan State University — created the new maps by first identifying 45 land-use types from two federal land databases, including both croplands and natural habitats. Then they gathered detailed input from 14 experts on bee ecology about each type of land — and how suitable it was for providing wild bees with nesting and food resources.

Averaging the experts’ input and levels of certainty, the scientists built a bee habitat model that predicts the relative abundance of wild bees for every area of the contiguous United States, based on their quality for nesting and feeding from flowers. Finally, the team checked and validated their model against bee collections and field observations in many actual landscapes.

The model’s confidence is greatest in agricultural areas with declining bees, matching both the consensus of the experts’ opinion and available field data. However, the study also outlines several regions with greater uncertainty about bee populations. This knowledge can direct future research, especially in farming areas where need for pollination is high.

“We can now predict which areas are suffering the biggest declines of wild bee abundance,” Insu Koh says, “and identify those areas, with low bee supply and high bee demand, that are the top priority for conservation.”

Vermont Biz



12 Comments on "Wild bee decline threatens US crop production"

  1. makati1 on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 6:31 am 

    Yes, Obama, do more studies when you know the cause is the huge pesticide production and use in the Us. Not to mention those zombie crops that have built in poisons.

    “Over 1 billion pounds of pesticides are used in the United State (US) each year…” Wiki

    That is ~18% of the total used in the world in the same time period, even though the US is only ~9% of the total cultivated land in the world. About 3 pounds per capita.

    Nice to know that we have a huge wild bee hive in one of our trees on the farm. They are common here. You can buy wild honey, in the comb, on the street in Makati. No processing required and cheap.

  2. JuanP on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 7:06 am 

    Mason and leafcutter bees are an alternative to honey bees and better pollinators. I think the more pollinators you have in the garden the better. You can check them out at http://crownbees.com/

  3. Kenz300 on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 9:17 am 

    The bees are the canary in the coal mine….. they are telling us that something is wrong……. we cannot continue to poison the earth and expect to survive.
    Pesticides are an environmental hazard…..

  4. onlooker on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 9:20 am 

    Yes the bees and many other species. The biggest canary in the coal mine is that we have already embarked on the 6th Mass Extinction Event on Earth and most scientists agree it is mostly man-made.

  5. Rodster on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 6:40 pm 

    MonSatan loves bees, especially dead ones.

  6. makati1 on Wed, 23rd Dec 2015 7:38 pm 

    GMO! Go! Go! GO!

    “The United States leads the world in genetically modified (GM) plantings. Commodity crops genetically engineered to be herbicide tolerant or pest resistant are the norm in U.S. fields.

    In 2013, they included 93% of all soybeans, 90% of all feed corn and 90% of all cotton, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.”

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/02/13/gmos-2013-plantings-up-to-117-worldwide/5430617/

    “The genetic engineering of plants and animals is looming as one of the greatest and most intractable environmental challenges of the 21st Century.”

    “Currently, up to 92% of U.S. corn is genetically engineered (GE), as are 94% of soybeans and 94% of cotton [1] (cottonseed oil is often used in food products). It has been estimated that upwards of 75% of processed foods on supermarket shelves – from soda to soup, crackers to condiments – contain genetically engineered ingredients.”

    “A number of studies over the past decade have revealed that genetically engineered foods can pose serious risks to farmers, human health, domesticated animals, wildlife and the environment”

    http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/issues/311/ge-foods/about-ge-foods#

    Only heirloom seeds for our farm. Nothing GMO or Hybrid that does not breed true for next crop’s seeds.

  7. theedrich on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 6:22 am 

    Whitey’s embrace of genosuicide has been showing up in the biological infrastructure for some years now.  His belief in Christianity’s miracle factory is not limited to race-mixing or adoration of the Hebrews.  After abandoning the will to live and having allowed the richest 10% to export his economy to ultra-polluting Outland, he now figures the biosphere is less important than “American values” which are officially “non-negotiable.”

    The interesting thing is that almost every step Whites make today leads consciously to their own self-extinction.  (After all, anything else would be “un-American.”)  They keep voting for illegal-serf-importing politicians at the same time that they demand to eat their cake (and smoke their dope) and have it, too.  The new Demonic-Party serfs are, in accord with their various provenances, re-interpreting freedom as freebies.  In sum, poisoning of the natural world is an automatic consequence of this whole game, but “American values” will not allow any halt to it.

    Given that Hotflash Hillary (or just possibly even another amnesty fanatic like Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush) will probably be the next POTUS, we can expect a global nosedive before 2020.  She will blame it on the disappearing White man as, behind closed doors, she kneels and services Georg Sörös and his kind.

    Bye-bye, bees.

  8. JuanP on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 6:38 am 

    Thedick, You are like a broken record, man. This race that, that race the other. It must be really sad and limiting to go through life experiencing it like that. You have no idea what you are missing, there are so many wonderful people who are different from you, but you will never be ablle to relate to them in a healthy, productive way because of your psychological flaws, it is even sad to watch from here.

  9. makati1 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 7:12 am 

    JuanP, unfortunately the ‘melting pot’ idea never really worked in America. Slavery and the colonial mentality came on the boat with the original ‘settlers'(plunderers) and remains to this day. Some never open their minds to the other 6 billion who have permanent tans and real cultures to enjoy.

    There is no culture in America, except greed, from day one. Good thing whitey will soon be a minority in the Us. I believe white males already are. More and more ‘white’ girls are taking the permanent tans for lovers, husbands and fathers. The white race will soon be all mulatto or other mixes. Bad news for the sun tan lotion people. And the racists. LOL

  10. Davy on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 7:19 am 

    Mak, nothing like fighting racism with racism. Very effect deception by someone full of hate and resentments.

  11. makati1 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 8:49 am 

    Reality is a bitch isn’t it? Some have a problem facing it. LMAO

  12. Apneaman on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 4:16 pm 

    I just love all the happy end of the year reviews.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=feYJiZVTuHQ

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *