Hobbyist beekeepers are buzzing after reversing America's critical bee shortage in just 5 years

https://lemmy.world/post/21663699

Hobbyist beekeepers are buzzing after reversing America's critical bee shortage in just 5 years - Lemmy.World

Article (from earlier this year): https://finance.yahoo.com/news/hobbyist-beekeepers-buzzing-reversing-america-212213119.html [https://finance.yahoo.com/news/hobbyist-beekeepers-buzzing-reversing-america-212213119.html]

This is actually not a good thing.

For one, Honeybees disrupt the structure and functionality of plant-pollinator networks, and they are nowhere near the type of pollinator we actually need (i.e. native, wild pollinators that thrive outside artificial colonies created to benefit humans).

There’s no balance if we only increase populations of honeybees. “Raising nonnatives does not “save the bees”—and may harm them.”

The article (the Yahoo one linked in the OP) does cover the detriments of these domestic bee colonies, but right at the end of the article…

The David Suzuki Foundation has a write-up on this topic, if anyone’s interested.

Honeybees disrupt the structure and functionality of plant-pollinator networks - Scientific Reports

The honeybee is the primary managed species worldwide for both crop pollination and honey production. Owing to beekeeping activity, its high relative abundance potentially affects the structure and functioning of pollination networks in natural ecosystems. Given that evidences about beekeeping impacts are restricted to observational studies of specific species and theoretical simulations, we still lack experimental data to test for their larger-scale impacts on biodiversity. Here we used a three-year field experiment in a natural ecosystem to compare the effects of pre- and post-establishment stages of beehives on the pollination network structure and plant reproductive success. Our results show that beekeeping reduces the diversity of wild pollinators and interaction links in the pollination networks. It disrupts their hierarchical structural organization causing the loss of interactions by generalist species, and also impairs pollination services by wild pollinators through reducing the reproductive success of those plant species highly visited by honeybees. High-density beekeeping in natural areas appears to have lasting, more serious negative impacts on biodiversity than was previously assumed.

Nature

Come to uplifting news! We turn news that seems good and still make you feel horrible!

Can we please just celebrate partial wins? Please?

This isn’t uplifting or a partial win, you cannot comat an ecological disaster with another ecological disaster. Its like releasing a ton of wild cats into the wild, great for the cats not great for anything else.
I’d be happy to see cats everywhere. At least until the barren wasteland they’d cause claims me as well.
I vote for that apawcolypse