US beekeepers reported lower winter losses but abnormally high summer losses
Beekeepers across the United States lost 43.7% of their managed honey bee colonies from April 2019 to April 2020, according to preliminary results of the 14th annual nationwide survey conducted by the nonprofit Bee Informed Partnership (BIP). These losses mark the second highest loss rate the survey has recorded since it began in 2006 (4.7 percentage points higher than the average annual loss rate of 39.0%). The survey results highlight the cyclical nature of honey bee colony turnover. Although the high loss rate was driven by the highest summer losses ever reported by the survey, winter losses were markedly lower than in most years. As researchers learn more about what drives these cycles of loss, this year emphasizes the importance of the summer for beekeeper losses.
This past year, winter losses were reported at 22.2%, which is 15.5 percentage points lower than last year and 6.4 points lower than the survey average. However, high summer losses were reported at 32.0%, which is 12.0 percentage points higher than last year and 10.4 points higher than the survey average.
"This year, summer loss was actually the highest we've ever recorded, even higher than winter losses, which is only the second time we've seen that, and it's mostly commercial beekeepers that are driving that loss number, which is unusual," says Nathalie Steinhauer, BIP's science coordinator and a post-doctoral researcher in the University of Maryland Department of Entomology. "So that makes this year different and interesting to us, because we want to know what is driving their losses up in comparison to previous years."
Commercial beekeepers typically have lower losses than backyard and smaller operations. Commercial honey bees pollinate $15 billion worth of food crops in the United States each year, so their health is critical to food production and supply.
Survey data, Loss map, Preliminary report (abstract (pdf))
(Score: -1, Offtopic) by jmichaelhudsondotnet on Tuesday June 23 2020, @04:33PM (3 children)
This is a slide spam thread, it doesnt deserve to be posted at SN unless they are watering this place down on purpose.
6 months ago I couldnt get a hard tech story by the mods because they were so busy, now they approve everything, shows you what this place really is.
smh
that said the bees being fucked are due to EMF and pesticides and stupidity, of which there is no end in sight
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 23 2020, @05:48PM
ba dum tisss
(Score: 3, Funny) by DannyB on Tuesday June 23 2020, @05:53PM
Here is a way to be less upset about the SN mods picks.
Look at the subject line:
"US Beekeepers Reported Lower Winter Losses but Abnormally High Summer Losses"
Now imagine that the second word was Bookkeepers.
The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.
(Score: 2, Informative) by PaperNoodle on Tuesday June 23 2020, @07:49PM
>bees being fucked are due to EMF and pesticides and stupidity
Largest contributor is habitat loss and then a far distant second is residual pesticides in the environment.
B3