The Bees and The Bees

By Jean Siers

April 2024

When it seems like all environmental news lately is bad, a recent story in the Washington Post caught my eye: America’s honeybee populations are at an all-time high. That’s great news! Or is it? Our problems are solved! Or are they?

For years we have been hearing about colony collapse, with the rallying cry of “No Bees, No Food.” Home gardeners and farmers alike worried that our watermelons, zucchini, and tomatoes wouldn’t be pollinated. Now, as more farmers (large and small) are raising bees, and more studies are going into preventing colony collapse, the numbers of honeybees are rising, dramatically in some places. 

That’s good news for agriculture in particular. Although honeybees are not native to the United States (they were brought here in the 1700s from Europe), they are noninvasive and incredibly efficient at pollinating huge fields of crops. Without them, sunflower fields, almond orchards, and many other types of agriculture would struggle. 

So when we read stories like the one in the Post, it’s easy to think our problems are over. But that’s not so. 

Eliza Grames, an entomologist at Binghamton University, put it this way in the Post article: ‘“You wouldn’t be like, ‘Hey, birds are doing great. We’ve got a huge biomass of chickens!’ It’s kind of the same thing with honeybees,” she said. “They’re domesticated. They’re essentially livestock.”’

Grames argues that if we continue to focus solely on the cultivation and preservation of honeybees, we ultimately risk losing the diversity we need for our native trees, shrubs, and flowers to thrive. There are around 4,000 native bee varieties in the United States, and about 400 native bee species in Maryland alone. Approximately 40 percent of them currently are vulnerable to extinction. 

Those native bees are also highly efficient pollinating machines. And often they are the only insects pollinating native plants. 

The other thing to remember: Not all pollinators are bees. Our native plants have a symbiotic relationship with native pollinators, and often specific plants rely on very specific pollinators. They can include bees, yes, but also butterflies, wasps, gnats, moths, beetles, birds, bats, and more. If native pollinators don’t have native plants to pollinate, they go into decline. If native plants lack native pollinators, they go into decline. We begin a death spiral of extinction, even as honeybees continue pollinating huge swaths of agricultural lands. 

The answer to this problem is the same as the answer to so many environmental problems. 

Protecting and promoting honeybees is great. Celebrating their survival in spite of colony collapse and other threats is exactly what we should do. But we need to continue to protect and promote the pollinators who were here first, our natives. Without them, our landscape will lose much of what makes Maryland beautiful.

Jean Siers is the Delmarva Regional Director for Society of St. Andrew, a WET board member, and a master gardener intern.