Bees, © Bob Peterson

 

Bees

Far from a bumbler, the bee is a productive pollinator with a reputation for diligence. That’s fortunate for us because close to 75 percent of flowering plants rely on insects to help them produce fruit and seeds. 

And none does it better than a bee. That’s because most have fuzzy, feathery body hairs that carry an electrostatic charge to snag pollen. It’s not intentional. As bees feed, court or gather nectar, pollen sticks to their bodies and rubs off accidentally as they buzz from flower to flower, pollinating on the fly. 

We rely on pollinators like the humble bumble bee for a full third of our food supply. Wildlife—from songbirds to grizzly bears—rely on them even more. Without them, we’d have no apples, blueberries, chocolate, coffee or orange juice, to name a few delicacies we’d have to forgo.

Given the importance of bees, their dramatic decline in recent decades is particularly alarming. Native bees from California to Maine have been disappearing because of habitat loss or degradation, pesticides and the spread of diseases and parasites. Massive honey bee die-offs—coined “colony collapse disorder” after it was first noticed in 2006—still have scientists puzzled and searching for a solution.

—Heidi Ridgley

 

GET UP STAND UP

Agriculture, forestry, mining and urban development have all done a number on bees.

But you can help by:

Protecting, enhancing or restoring native wildflower foraging habitat.

Providing nesting sites (untilled, unmulched, partially bare ground with leaf pieces or mud for nesting materials).

Avoiding pesticides.

Advocating for bees with neighbors and local policymakers.

More Articles From This Issue

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No Reprieve in the Rockies

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Wild Matters

Bison Calves Born at Fort Peck; Trapped, Poisoned and Shot; Blinded by the Light

Living Lightly

Riding With the Wind

The Sea Upon Us

Federally protected coastal habitat is no match for global warming

A Wild Moment

Defenders of Wildlife’s 2012 Photo Contest

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Bee on Flower
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