Keeping bees holds intrigue and interest for many, but the practice of beekeeping is more than just a pastime: it is becoming vital. Honeybee numbers have dwindled over the last five decades. Their decline has been variously attributed to disease, exposure to pesticides, climate change, and a mono-crop approach to agriculture. Regardless of the causes, the decline of the honeybee - officially called Colony Collapse disorder, or CCD - has the potential to affect humanity profoundly.
Why Bees Are Important
Of course, bees provide honey; but it is their role as pollinator that is so crucial to America's food supply. They pollinate more than three quarters of our flowering crops. If flowers are not pollinated, they will not bear fruit. That means that honey bees are responsible for wild and domestic apples, pears, strawberries, oranges, cucumbers, blueberries, broccoli, almonds, and much more.
The enormously economical crop soybeans is pollinated largely by honeybees. Bees also pollinate alfalfa, a crop that farmers use to feed beef and dairy cattle. So honeybees have an effect on our steaks, burgers, cheese, milk, and other animal products. It has been said that, without bees, humans would have to survive on bread and water. And there would be no ...