The world's honeybees appear to be dying off
in horrifying numbers, and now consensus is starting to emerge
on the reason why: it seems there is no one cause. Infections,
lack of food, pesticides and breeding - none catastrophic on
their own - are having a synergistic effect, pushing bee survival
to a lethal tipping point. A somewhat anti-climactic conclusion
it may be, but appreciating this complexity - and realising
there will be no magic bullet - may be the key to saving the
insects.
A third of our food relies on bees for pollination. Both the
US and UK report losing a third of their bees last year. Other
European countries have seen major die-offs too: Italy, for
example, said it lost nearly half its bees last year. The deaths
are now spreading to Asia, with reports in India and suspected
cases in China.
But while individual "sub-lethal stresses" such as infections
are implicated, we know little about how they add together.
The situation should become clearer in the next few years as
the US government, the EU and others are pouring money into
bee research. The UK, for example, has doubled its annual research
budget, allocating £400,000 a year for the next five years.
On top of that, the UK National Bee Unit will get £2.3 million
to map the problem. This money is urgently needed, says Peter
Neumann of the Swiss Bee Research Centre in Berne, who runs
COLLOSS, a network of researchers studying colony loss in 36
countries. "We don't have the data to assess the situation in
Europe, never mind the world," he says.
The main stress facing bees is the varroa mite, a parasite
from Siberia that has now spread everywhere but Australia. Mite
infestations steeply reduce bees' resistance to viral infection.
Worryingly, the mites are developing resistance to the pesticides
used to control them, forcing beekeepers to use methods that
are often less effective.
French and German beekeepers blame their losses on insecticides
called neonicotinoids - but France banned them 10 years ago
and its bees are still dying. Neumann suspects a wider problem,
citing experiments showing that agricultural chemicals that
are safe for bees when used alone are lethal in combination.
"Farmers increasingly combine sprays," he says. They also leave
few flowering weeds, depriving bees of essential nutrients from
different kinds of pollen, he adds.
Meanwhile viruses may cause a syndrome dubbed colony collapse
disorder (CCD) in the US, in which adult bees abandon their
hive, leaving the healthy queen and young bees to die. Diana
Cox-Foster of Penn State University in University Park, where
the syndrome was first identified, says viruses, including one
called IAPV, duplicate the symptoms of CCD in her greenhouse
studies. There is no IAPV or CCD in the UK, says Mike Brown
of the National Bee Unit, yet bees are still dying.
At the root of the vulnerability to these stresses could be
the way breeding has affected the bees' genetic make-up. By
being highly selected for calmness and honey production, honeybees
have lost other useful characteristics, says Francis Ratnieks
of the University of Sussex, UK. In research to be published
in the journal Heredity, he describes a way to breed
for "hygienic" bees that, unlike most commercial bees, clear
out infected young and can resist varroa mites.
By being highly selected
for calmness and honey production, bees have lost other
useful traits