Creating a buzz
To celebrate World Bee Day, here are six reasons why we should all ‘bee’ grateful for bees.
2. They give us honey! Did you know that out of close to 20 000 species of bees only 7 of them are honeybees? Western honeybees produce 1.6 million tonnes of honey per year! This wonderful product is a natural sweetener that also has antibacterial and antiseptic properties. Honey has been a part of human civilization for millennia.
The ancient Egyptians used honey for medicinal purposes, such as healing wounds; they also used beeswax to embalm the dead and create artificial light. Today, products like honey, beeswax and other byproducts provide additional income to rural families.
Tip: Buy raw honey from local farmers. Many local smallholder farmers and forest communities maintain sustainable beekeeping practices. You can lend support by buying raw honey, beeswax or other bee products, directly from them.
3. They have a great work ethic – A single honeybee will typically visit around 7 000 flowers a day, and it takes four million flower visits to produce a kilogram of honey. Each individual bee is part of a team working tirelessly to support the growth and productivity of their beehive by gathering as much pollen as possible, while at the same time pollinating many plant species. This tireless dedication has given rise to the saying “busy as a bee”.
Tip: Reward these busy bodies by making a bee water fountain. These little ones need water after buzzing around all day. Leaving a clean, shallow water bowl, with rocks or sticks in it so that bees don’t drown, is a good way to give the bees a resting spot and some necessary refreshment.
4- They make our foods taste better – Well-pollinated plants produce larger, more uniform, tastier fruits and vegetables. Plants gauge how much effort is needed to produce a fruit or vegetable.
If it hasn’t been well pollinated, plants won’t necessarily invest resources evenly in their production, resulting in misshaped or bland fruits and vegetables. A deformed apple, for example, could mean that the plant had insufficient or imbalanced pollination!
Tip: Avoid pesticides, fungicides or herbicides in your gardens. They can kill pollinators and poison hives with contaminated nectar or pollen brought by bees from contaminated plants. Try to find natural solutions to pests for the plants in your garden.
5- They increase food production and food security – In one study where pollination was well-managed on small diverse farms, crop yields increased by a significant median of 24 percent!
Bees and other pollinating insects are improving the food production of 2 billion small farmers worldwide, helping to ensure food security for the world’s population. Honey hunting of wild bee colonies also remains an important part of the livelihoods of forest-dependent peoples in many developing countries.
Tip for farmers: Create a good habitat for bees in order to ensure pollination. Leave some areas of the farm as a natural habitat. Create hedgerows with native plants that flower at different times during the year and plant attractive crops such as sunflower and coffee, and fruit trees such avocado and mango. Reduce your use of pesticides, and leave bee-nesting sites untouched.
6- They maintain biodiversity – Pollination is one of nature’s most important processes contributing to biodiversity. It helps us to produce a wide variety of plants many of which are also food crops.
An estimated 90 percent of the world’s flowering plants depend on pollination for reproduction. And though often overlooked, bees and forest beekeeping also help sustain forest ecosystems as pollination helps the regeneration of trees which in turn helps to conserve forest biodiversity.
Tip: Learn more about bees and conquer your fear. By researching these creatures, you will see that bees are not generally dangerous. Not all bees sting and the ones that do, do it for a reason. Stinging and swarming are self-defense mechanisms.
They don’t intentionally hunt humans. By better understanding how to respect them, you can avoid bad encounters and learn to live peacefully with these necessary creatures. And help spread the word: You can be an advocate for bees!
It is no wonder that all the major world religions have sacred passages about bees. They have been and still are vital to food and life as we know it.
Through the 2018-2030 plan of action of the International Pollinators Initiative, FAO and the Convention on Biological Diversity Secretariat in consultation with the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and other partners, will promote coordinated action worldwide to safeguard wild and managed pollinators and promote the sustainable use of pollination services, which is recognized as vital for agriculture and healthy ecosystems.
These actions support agriculture that is more diverse and less dependent on toxic chemicals. Helping keep our pollinators safe supports our food production, the incomes of farmers and the wider environment. Help us spread the buzz on World Bee Day.
Learn more:
- FAO’s work on pollination services
- The power of pollinators: why more bees means better food
- Spotlight: Seven bee-friendly fruits and veggies
- On ecosystems and the services they provide – Let’s talk facts
- Bees and their role in forest livelihoods
- FAO’s work related to biodiversity
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