MAY 12, 2015
Honey bees, critical agents in the pollination of key U.S.
crops, disappeared at a staggering rate over the last year, according to a new
government report that comes as regulators, environmentalists and
agribusinesses try to reverse the decline.
Losses of managed honey bee colonies hit 42.1 percent from
April 2014 through April 2015, up from 34.2 percent for 2013-2014, and the
second-highest annual loss to date, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said in
a report issued on Wednesday.
"Such high colony losses in the summer and year-round
remain very troubling," Jeff Pettis, a USDA senior entomologist, said in a
statement.
The results are based on survey responses from about 6,100
beekeepers managing about 400,000 colonies, or roughly 15.5 percent of U.S. bee
colonies.
The 2014-15 decline was down from the 45 percent fall in
2012-2013 but well above the other three years of annual measurements and well
above the 18.7 percent benchmark considered economically unsustainable, the
USDA said.
Honey bees are needed to pollinate plants that produce a
quarter of the food consumed by Americans. Beekeepers travel the country with
managed hives to help the process.
Over the past few years, bees have been dying at a rate the
U.S. government says must be addressed, and the issue has become politically
charged.
Beekeepers, environmental groups and some scientists blame a
class of insecticide known as neonicotinoids, or neonics, used on crops such as
corn as well as on plants used in lawns and gardens. Some lawn and garden
retailers have cut the use of neonics.
Bayer, Syngenta and others that sell neonic products say
mite infestations and other factors are the cause.
A subcommittee of the U.S. House Committee on Agriculture is
holding a hearing on Wednesday, and the White House has formed a task force to
study the issue. The Environmental Protection Agency is requiring a series of
studies on neonic effects on bees and plans to release the first in a series of
assessments later this year.
Pettis said on Wednesday that the high summer losses
weakened the argument that mites are behind the large losses as the mites are
most active in winter. He said pesticide exposure was likely at least one
factor.
"The bees should be surviving better, but the numbers
say otherwise," he said.
This is the first time the USDA has released information
about summer month bee losses, though it has gathered the information since
2010-2011.
The 2014-2015 season was the first that summer losses
exceeded winter, at 27.4 percent and 23.1 percent, respectively. Winter losses
the prior year were 23.7 percent and summer losses 19.8 percent.
Bayer CropScience called the report "good news,"
citing the winter loss decline, in a statement issued on Tuesday. Bayer said
summer losses were "expected and common," and experts did not agree
on what was a "normal range for summer losses."
A full report will be published later this year, the USDA
said.