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Russia alarmed by large fall in bee populations

sourceBeekeeper Tom

time2020/09/07

Russia should be more than alarmed! According to the BBC, their beekeeping industry derives their honey from bumblebees. Good luck with that!
Media reporting inaccuracies, this occurs daily with news reporting. The articles purport to be factual, written as authority pieces. We the consumers take the information, run with it, and form opinions based upon lazy, flawed and distorted articles.

So, let me get a few things off my chest here! I despise lazy reporting.

Beekeepers keep honeybees not bumblebees!

Whilst it is reasonable that reporters do not always have deep, expert knowledge of the topic they report upon.
Articles in the media are influential, so it is perfectly reasonable to expect reporters to check, and confirm facts.
In this instance, the authors’ knowledge is glaringly amateur at best.

This is a great shame given the article speaks of how honeybees are slowly, but knowingly, being exterminated by agrochemical companies.

This does remind me of examples used when medical studies show remote tribes around the planet do not suffer from heart disease, diabetes or cancer’s until introduced to a western diet.

In other words!
Honeybees flourished, until insecticides, that claimed to be safe, were used.
You are witnessing the beginning of the end if left unchecked.

Anyhow! I’ll step down from my soapbox now.


Bees pollinate many essential crops and are vital for fruit-growers
Yes they do BUT! This is a bumblebee NOT a honeybee as such does not produce an excess of honey that can be harvested!

Large areas of central and southern Russia have seen a major decline in their bee populations in recent months.
The head of the Russian beekeepers’ union, Arnold Butov, said 20 regions had reported mass bee deaths.

The affected regions include Bryansk and Kursk, south of Moscow, and Saratov and Ulyanovsk on the Volga River.
Mr Butov, quoted by Russian media, said the crisis might mean 20% less honey being harvested. Some officials blamed poorly regulated pesticide use.
Yulia Melano, at the rural inspection service Rosselkhoznadzor, complained that her agency had lost most of its powers to control pesticide use since 2011.

Russia produces about 100,000 tonnes of honey annually. Mr Butov said the union’s members were collecting data on bee losses, so that by 1 August a detailed report could be submitted to the Russian government.


Reports show many insect populations are declining. How will that affect us?

Sunflowers and buckwheat are just two of the staple crops pollinated by bees in Russia. Orchards also rely on bees for pollination.
There are fears that the bee deaths will push up not only honey prices but also those of other popular foods. The crisis has spread as far as the Altai region in Siberia, more than 4,000km (2,485 miles) east of Moscow.

Declining bee populations have caused widespread alarm in Europe, with experts blaming the crisis on a combination of factors: climate change, pesticides – notably neonicotinoids – and varroa mites spreading in beehives.

In April 2018, the EU imposed an almost total ban on neonicotinoids because of the harm they do to bees and other pollinators. Beekeepers in France raised the alarm again in June this year, reporting many severely hit bee colonies. 

Robert Aigoin, president of the family farmers’ union Modef, said: “the first part of the season has been catastrophic”. He and other beekeepers blamed climate change, noting that late frosts had been followed by a severe heatwave in France.

It was a similar pattern in previous years for French producers: for example, in 2016 just 9,000 tonnes of honey was harvested, whereas about 20,000 tonnes is the usual.

A British professor keeps honey bees in a cello

France is a major honey producer in the EU, along with Spain, Germany, Romania, Poland, Hungary and Greece. 

About 250,000 tonnes of honey is produced in the EU annually. The bloc is the second-largest producer worldwide, while China produces the most – more than 500,000 tonnes. 

In May the European Commission accepted a European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI) called “Save the bees!”, which urges tougher measures to boost biodiversity, through conservation initiatives, pesticide bans and restrictions on fertilisers. If the ECI organisers collect a million or more signatures within a year, the Commission has to consider legislating on the proposal.

The Commission is providing €120m (£108m) over the next three years in support for the EU beekeeping sector. That sum will also be matched by contributions from member states.

curated from: BBC