Where would we be without bees? A third of what we eat and much of what we wear relies on pollination by honeybees. So the fact that honeybees are in desperate trouble as their numbers plummet across the planet is of major concern to all of us.
A World Without Bees, whose authors are keen beekeepers themselves, outlines the history of the human relationship with the honeybee, going back to early cave paintings of bees. It then explores all the stresses that we put on bees, including trucking bees across the USA to pollinate crops across the country (but especially the Californian almond orchards); the effects of pesticides and fungicides and the spread of parasites such as the Varroa mite. The authors speak to scientists, farmers and bee-keepers to try to analyse how these stresses fit in with the widely observed colony collapse disorder which sees hives suddenly lose all or most of their bees.
This is sobering, depressing reading and doesn't really offer any solutions. But one thing is certain, we need to save the bees, if we are to have any meaningful future ourselves.
A World Without Bees by Alison Benjamin and Brian McCallum published by Guardian Books.
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Thank you for this review. It sounds like an interesting read, although a depressing one.
ReplyDeleteI think about this all the time. It's so very scary.
ReplyDeleteIt is very sad to think of how we mistreat such important creatures. And it's also sad to read about the rate in which their disappearing!
ReplyDeleteI can see the difference in just the span of my life. As a child, bees where everywhere. Now, I can picnic all I want, and hardly a bee in sight. Heavy sigh.
ReplyDeleteI guess I am Lucky I get a lot of bees in me garden including wild Tunneling Bees,xx Rachel
ReplyDeleteIt is good that this issue is so widely appreciated and being worked on - faster, faster!
ReplyDeletevery sad - glad to say we have thousands of bees on our property - all different types include the native bee which doesn't sting
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