Why Bees Are the Most Invaluable Species
An Environmental Article from All-Creatures.org
From
November 2008
Bees were last night declared the most invaluable species on the planet
at the annual Earthwatch debate. The audience heard from five eminent
scientists who battled it out for fungi, bats, plankton, primates and bees.
Photograph by Rex Features
Bees gather around a honeycomb
While of course all species are invaluable for our ecosystem, the debate is
designed to raise awareness about conservation by asking the audience to
vote for just one of the species to receive a fictitious check for one
trillion pounds to be spent on their conservation.
It comes us no surprise that the audience voted to save the bees. Who would
want a world without honey, flowers, and third of everything we eat
including chocolate and coffee? Not me.
Some 250,000 species of flowering plants depend on bees for pollination.
Many of these are crucial to world agriculture. Bees increase the yields of
around 90 crops, such as apples, blueberries and cucumbers by up to 30%, so
many fruits and vegetables would become scarce and prohibitively expensive.
In addition, many of our medicines, both conventional and alternative
remedies, come from flowering plants. And cotton is another essential
product pollinated by the bee, so we could say goodbye to cheap T-shirts and
jeans.
But it's not just the human race that would suffer. Spare a thought for the
poor birds and small mammals that feed off the berries and seeds that rely
on bee pollination. They would die of hunger and in turn their predators –
the omnivores or carnivores that continue the food chain would also starve.
We could survive on wind-pollinated grains and fish, but there would be wars
for control of dwindling food supplies. South America's ancient Mayan
civilisation is thought to have died of starvation.
Although other insects and animals do pollinate – such as bats, butterflies
and even wasps – none is designed like the bee as a pollinator machine.
There are 20,000 bee species around the world including solitary bees,
bumblebees and honeybees. Many are monoletic – pollinate one plant – others
like bumblebees and honeybees are polylectic. While bumblebees live in
colonies of a few hundred, the sheer number of honeybees in a hive – up to
50,000 in the summer - and their ability to be managed, manipulated and
transported by man makes them the most valuable pollinator.
Unfortunately all bees are already under serious industrialized farming with
its monocultures and pesticides has destroyed biodiversity and robbed the
majority of bees of their habitat and food. While across the globe, the
western honeybee – bred for its gentle nature and prolific honey making and
pollination – is plagued by parasites and viruses, and also jeopardized by
modern agricultural practices. More than a third of honeybees were wiped out
in the US this year by Colony Collapse Disorder, a mysterious disease which
is thought to be a combination of these assailants.
As Dr George McGavin, who was batting for the bees said: "Bee populations
are in freefall. A world without bees would be totally catastrophic."
The Earthwatch audience should be applauded for heading his call and voting
to save them, and itself as well.
For more, see
Bees
Vanish, and Scientists Race for Reasons.
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