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Is honey beekeeping doing more harm than good?

As managed honeybee hives multiply, wild bees and butterflies are disappearing. Since honeybees are not endangered, is beekeeping responsible for the decline of other bees?

In partnership with The European Commission

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2025/07/03/is-honey-beekeeping-doing-more-harm-than-good

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Transcript
00:00Is honey beekeeping doing more harm than good?
00:03One-third of pollinator species, such as bees, butterflies, bats and hummingbirds,
00:09are in decline in many parts of the world.
00:11In Europe, one out of ten bee and butterfly species is threatened with extinction.
00:21Without pollination, there is no plant reproduction.
00:24Many plant species would decline and eventually disappear.
00:28Almonds, apples, coffee and strawberries are some of the foods that depend on the essential pollination work carried out by bees.
00:37What is really happening is that we are losing the rare and dangerous species,
00:42and we are reducing the populations of many bees.
00:46And for this, we don't need to speculate.
00:48We already know that in agricultural areas, very intensive with large monocultures,
00:54they lose most of their wild bee populations, and the crop yields have declined consequently.
01:03So, for humans, a first clear impact is that the crop production will decrease.
01:10There are 20,000 different species of bees, species of flies, butterflies, moths, wasps, beetles, drapes, birds, bats and other vertebrates.
01:21However, humans can only domesticate or manage honey bees, which isn't always the most effective species,
01:28either in how much they can pollinate or the range of plants they serve.
01:32As wild bee and butterfly populations shrink, the number of honey bee hives in the European Union has been steadily growing.
01:40The EU is the world's second largest honey producer after China.
01:46The drivers of pollinator decline are well known.
01:49Land use changes, intensive farming, pesticide use, pollution, invasive species, infectious diseases and climate change.
01:58But now, some scientists say honey beekeeping could be making things worse.
02:03So, in the agricultural areas we were working on in Spain, which were orange groves,
02:09and beekeepers put hives close to these groves to get honey.
02:14But then what happens with oranges is that they flower all at the same time, and they flower for a short period of time,
02:22something like a week or something like that.
02:24And then when all those orange flowers disappear, those bees, they were moving into the surrounding areas in search for extra food.
02:33So, could large honey bee hives be depriving wild bees of the food they need to survive?
02:39They have very large colonies of tens of thousands of individuals and are extremely good at finding flower resources and foraging for those resources.
02:48So, when there is abundance of honey bees in the neighborhood, you have some serious competition.
02:54Those wild bees are really under serious competition.
02:57For that reason, for many ecologists, honey beekeeping is not protecting biodiversity.
03:02In some cases, it may even be harmful, especially where there are fewer flowers like urban spaces.
03:10I've even seen some campaigns trying to increase the amount of honey bee hives,
03:15like commercial honey bee hives, to rescue pollinators.
03:19And for me, that would be equivalent to say, like, we need more chicken farms to save the bird biodiversity.
03:25So, what's the solution to saving wild bees?
03:28If I can plant a wildflower patch in my garden, if you can do the same, bit by bit, it just exponentiates and extrapolates.
03:38And it's just one step that you can do.
03:40The solutions may sound simple, but putting them into practice is not always straightforward.
03:46Many of these steps are already encouraged by the EU Pollinators Initiative, but adoption remains a challenge.
03:53Researchers agree. The most important step is raising awareness and educating the public.
03:59Planting native flowers, the ones that local bees have evolved with, can make a big difference.
04:05Think borage, comfrey, lavender and dandelions.
04:09And rather than keeping lawns perfectly trimmed, let them grow a little wild.
04:14Avoid pesticide use whenever possible.
04:17Because bees don't just help us grow food, they serve as bio-indicators of ecosystem health.
04:23So, if wild bees are driving in your garden, you're helping biodiversity drive too.
04:28Sc robbers love show can only result a long traveler.
04:30criticism is previously run because bees are being cured when pooping become----.
04:35It is very helpful to them all, but from the cold water they're trying to starve from technologies.
04:40And when they were tourists taking over, boom, you're working there, and I'd be unable to do the same thing.
04:44You've dt, the logo-1c povo of the c- говорил dandelions.
04:47And then when we attack a sustained fire fit, please.
04:49Really?
04:50So, Varie Oro F.

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