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Tag: Bees

  • A California photographer is on a quest to photograph hundreds of native bees

    LOS ANGELES — In the arid, cracked desert ground in Southern California, a tiny bee pokes its head out of a hole no larger than the tip of a crayon.

    Krystle Hickman crouches over with her specialized camera fitted to capture the minute details of the bee’s antennae and fuzzy behind.

    “Oh my gosh, you are so cute,” Hickman murmurs before the female sweat bee flies away.

    Hickman is on a quest to document hundreds of species of native bees, which are under threat by climate change and habitat loss, some of it caused by the more recognizable and agriculturally valued honey bee — an invasive species. Of the roughly 4,000 types of bees native to North America, Hickman has photographed over 300. For about 20 of them, she’s the first to ever photograph them alive.

    Through photography, she wants to raise awareness about the importance of native bees to the survival of the flora and fauna around them.

    “Saving the bees means saving their entire ecosystems,” Hickman said.

    On a Saturday in January, Hickman walked among the early wildflower bloom at Anza Borrego Desert State Park a few hundred miles east of Los Angeles, where clumps of purple verbena and patches of white primrose were blooming unusually early due to a wet winter.

    Where there are flowers, there are bees.

    Hickman has no formal science education and dropped out of a business program that she hated. But her passion for bees and keen observation skills made her a good community scientist, she said. In October, she published a book documenting California’s native bees, partly supported by National Geographic. She’s conducted research supported by the University of California, Irvine, and hopes to publish research notes this year on some of her discoveries.

    “We’re filling in a lot of gaps,” she said of the role community scientists play in contributing knowledge alongside academics.

    On a given day, she might spend 16 hours waiting beside a plant, watching as bees wake up and go about their business. They pay her no attention.

    Originally from Nebraska, Hickman moved to Los Angeles to pursue acting. She began photographing honey bees in 2018, but soon realized native bees were in greater danger.

    Now, she’s a bee scientist full time.

    “I really think anyone could do this,” Hickman said.

    Melittologists, or people who study bees, have traditionally used pan trapping to collect and examine dead bee specimens. To officially log a new species, scientists usually must submit several bees to labs, Hickman said.

    There can be small anatomical differences between species that can’t be photographed, such as the underside of a bee, Hickman said.

    But Hickman is vehemently against capturing bees. She worries about harming already threatened species. Unofficially, she thinks she’s photographed at least four previously undescribed species.

    Hickman said she’s angered “a few melittologists before because I won’t tell them where things are.”

    Her approach has helped her forge a path as a bee behavior expert.

    During her trip to Anza Borrego, Hickman noted that the bees won’t emerge from their hideouts until around 10 a.m., when the desert begins to heat up. They generally spend 20 minutes foraging and 10 minutes back in their burrows to offload pollen, she said.

    “It’s really shockingly easy to make new behavioral discoveries just because no one’s looking at insects alive,” she said.

    Hickman still works closely with other melittologists, often sending them photos for identification and discussing research ideas.

    Christine Wilkinson, assistant curator of community science at the Natural History Museum in Los Angeles, said Hickman was a perfect example of why it’s important to incorporate different perspectives in the pursuit of scientific knowledge.

    “There are so many different ways of knowing and relating to the world,” Wilkinson said. “Getting engaged as a community scientist can also get people interested in and passionate about really making change.”

    There’s a critically endangered bee that Hickman is particularly determined to find – Bombus franklini, or Franklin’s bumblebee, last seen in 2006.

    Since 2021, she’s traveled annually to the Oregon-California border to look for it.

    “There’s quite a few people who think it’s extinct, but I’m being really optimistic about it,” she said.

    Habitat loss, as well as competition from honey bees, have made it harder for native bees to survive. Many native bees will only drink the nectar or eat the pollen of a specific plant.

    Because of her success in tracking down bees, she’s now working with various universities and community groups to help find lost species, which are bees that haven’t been documented in the wild for at least a decade.

    Hickman often finds herself explaining to audiences why native bees are important. They don’t make honey, and the disappearance of a few bees might not have an apparent impact on humans.

    “But things that live here, they deserve to live here. And that should be a good enough reason to protect them,” she said.

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  • Fossilized Bee Nests Inside Skeletons Are Unlike Anything We’ve Seen Before

    Scientists studying a Caribbean island cave have unearthed something unexpected: ancient bees very much unlike the hive-dwelling insects we’re most familiar with.

    For the first time ever, paleontologists have found fossil traces of burrowing bees nesting inside the buried bones of other animals. These fossils, thousands of years old, are the end result of a macabre life cycle that involved ancient rodents and giant barn owls. And they might also teach us a few lessons about bees today, the researchers say.

    “I think the most important outcome is to show how diverse the nesting behavior of bees can be,” study researcher Lazaro Viñola Lopez told Gizmodo.

    A “fortuitous” discovery

    Viñola Lopez was working as a doctoral student for the Florida Museum of Natural History when he helped excavate the fossils from inside the cave on the island of Hispaniola (the cave is located on the eastern half of the island, owned by the Dominican Republic). But neither he nor his colleagues were planning to make such a find.

    “The discovery was very fortuitous. We were looking for primates, rodents, lizards, and other vertebrates for our work on late Quaternary extinctions in the islands associated with humans and climatic changes,” he said. “We weren’t looking for any insects because they usually don’t preserve in that kind of environment.”

    The cave, named Cueva de Mono, contained thousands of fossils belonging to hutia, rodents related to the guinea pig. This discovery was amazing enough, given how rare hutia fossils were to find in the area. But Viñola Lopez also noticed that one of the fossils, a specimen of hutia mandibles, had an unusual smoothness to it.

    Viñola Lopez didn’t immediately dig deeper into his potential finding, and there were some bumps along the way. Based on his earlier work with dinosaur fossils, he initially speculated the hutia remains were used by wasps to build their nests, but the features of such nests didn’t quite match up with what he found.

    Eventually though, he realized these remains were likely used by a different insect, an ancient species of burrowing bee, named Osnidum almontei, that lived thousands of years ago. Thanks to later trips inside the cave to recover more fossils, they also found evidence of these nests inside the vertebra of a hutia and the pulp cavity of a sloth tooth (sloths used to live in the Caribbean islands, but were largely wiped out by human activity).

    The team’s findings were published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences.

    Unusual bees

    Though we most commonly think of bees as social insects that build elaborate nests in plain sight, Viñola Lopez notes that most bee species are solitary and use a wide range of structures and materials for nesting. But while these ancient bees seem to share a lot in common with modern counterparts, they also stand out in important and mysterious ways.

    “The bees that created these traces are similar to other bees in that they nested in the ground, but differ from all other known species in that they regularly used chambers in buried bones (such as tooth sockets),” he said. Another key distinction is the cave setting of these fossils. There’s only been one other documented instance of burrowing bees using a cave for their nests, according to the researchers, and that didn’t involve the bees using another animal’s fossil remains.

    As best as they can tell, the cave was home to a population of ancient barn owls that also regularly used it as a dumping ground for the hutia they hunted. The owls might have taken the rodents back home for dinner or sometimes just pooped them out from a meal on-the-go; these remains then later proved to be an appealing site for the bees’ nesting. And while much of the surrounding area is unsuitable for these insects, the cave and others like it might have contained enough built-up soil for the bees to rely on for their nests.

    Aside from learning more about bees, the team’s research has also taught them to be more cautious.

    “It changed how we look at and prepare fossils from these cave deposits in the Dominican Republic. Now we take much more care before cleaning them to make sure we don’t destroy any other interesting behavior of ancient insects hiding in the sediment inside the fossils,” he said.

    The ancient cave bees aren’t the only discovery the researchers are hoping to make. They’re already working to describe the many other fossils recovered from the cave, which should include never-before-characterized species of mammals, reptiles, and birds.

    Ed Cara

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  • Veterinary students learn to treat honeybees in addition to pets and livestock

    Beekeepers were ordered in 2017 to work with veterinarians to maintain the insects’ health, but not a lot of doctors had experience with honeybees. That’s why Colorado State University launched its first honeybee veterinary science course. Dillon Thomas reports.

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  • Philanthropist John Kluge Jr. Turns Pandemic Epiphany Into Net-Zero Meadery With Global Mission

    John Kluge Jr. pictured in Thistlerock’s net-zero production facility. Courtesy Thistlerock Mead Company

    John Kluge, a Virginia-based philanthropist and entrepreneur, came to a realization while holed up on his farm amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Over the past few years, he had become increasingly disengaged from nature—and he wasn’t alone. The connection between people and nature has declined by more than 60 percent during the past two decades, according to a recent study. Out of this revelation came the Thistlerock Mead Company. Launched by Kluge last year, it aims to become the first net-zero meadery in the U.S. and relies on regenerative agriculture and beekeeping practices to produce its honey wine. Just about everything to do with Thistlerock is sustainable, from its ingredient sourcing to its solar electricity and 100 percent post-consumer recycled glass bottles.

    Kluge didn’t just create Thistlerock to help consumers rekindle a bond with nature, but also to show the broader beverage industry that their industry is ripe with opportunities to tackle biodiversity challenges. “We are little—we can’t do this by ourselves,” he told Observer.

    To that end, Thistlerock is partnering with Bee:Wild, a division of the Leonardo DiCaprio-founded organization Re:Wild, and advocacy platform Global Citizen with a mission to bring other beverage companies into the fold. A new effort unveiled by the groups today (Sep. 24) will focus on assembling a coalition of corporations united by common goals that include mobilizing some 5 million pollinator-friendly actions, protecting 1 million acres of rainforest and generating $10 million in conservation funding.

    The announcement comes at a pressing time for pollinators. Honeybee colonies in the U.S. are expected to decrease by up to 70 percent this year compared to previous annual losses of 40 percent to 50 percent, according to researchers at Washington State University. They attributed the loss to factors like nutrition deficiencies, viral diseases and pesticide exposure. Despite the threats to their sustainability, pollinators remain integral to the world’s food supply and are responsible for three-quarters of food crops and 90 percent of all flowering plants.

    Woman in beekeeping gear holds a hive Woman in beekeeping gear holds a hive
    Allison Wickham, Thistlerock’s director of apiary operations, inspects a hive. Courtesy Thistlerock Mead Company

    A mixed bag of strategies

    As part of the initiative, Kluge is working with other members of the Virginia Mead Guild to help them source honey. The meaderies’ efforts will include integrating Indigenous-produced honey from Amazonian communities to ferment different styles of honey wine. A percentage of the proceeds from such products will be earmarked for reinvestment into the Bee:Wild campaign.

    It isn’t just beverage companies that have signed up for the collaborative coalition, but more than a dozen players across fields like fashion and beauty. The bulk of them incorporate pollen products across their business model. Other members who don’t directly work with pollinators are taking more creative approaches to the partnership. The Dubai Airport, for example, will focus on providing biodiversity-friendly messaging to the more than 90 million travelers who pass through annually, while A.I. startup G42 plans to work on a mapping tool that can indicate climate stressors to users. “They come to it from different sides,” Eva Kruse, executive director of Bee:Wild, told Observer.

    Bee:Wild is expecting a mixed bag of strategies to accomplish the cohort’s goals of boosting pollinator protection, biodiversity and conservation. According to Kluge, signing a petition advocating for pollinator rights could be one tactic, as could working with local institutions to rewild garden space or encouraging lawmakers to designate cities as members of Bee City USA, a commitment to support native pollinators.

    “The hope is that progress builds progress, and we will inspire each other to do more work together on behalf of our pollinators,” said Kluge, who wants the partnership to not only revive a connection to nature but also an appreciation for it. “Your morning coffee, the apple you pack for your kid’s lunch, the cocktail you have in the evening—these are things that depend on pollination and bees, and we take them for granted.”

    Philanthropist John Kluge Jr. Turns Pandemic Epiphany Into Net-Zero Meadery With Global Mission

    Alexandra Tremayne-Pengelly

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  • African Blue Basil: Long-Blooming and Beloved by Pollinators

    African Blue Basil: Long-Blooming and Beloved by Pollinators

    African Blue Basil, Ocimum kilimandscharicum x basilicum

    Whether you garden in-ground or in a single windowbox, there is a plant that will lure every pollinator in the neighborhood to your green space. African blue basil’s myriad flowers, in bloom for months, guarantee a flurry of constant and diverse pollinator activity from morning until twilight, and from early summer until frost. There is never a dull moment. And with the right plant for pollinators, even a tiny urban space can contribute to a pollinator pathway—a pesticide and herbicide-free corridor of plants that provides food and shelter for pollinating insects, which are in decline due to loss of habitat and to widespread pesticide use.

    It doesn’t hurt either that spending ten minutes on a bee safari is a very effective way of disconnecting from digital noise and reconnecting with the small things that matter.

    Photography by Marie Viljoen.

    Above: Windowbox-grown African blue basil in late summer on my Brooklyn terrace.

    In a small space every inch counts, and the ideal plant has to work hard: It should be low-maintenance, bloom for months, have fragrant and edible leaves, and offer an irresistible nectary for a host of beneficial insects. That’s asking a lot. A very small handful of plants checks all those demanding boxes. African blue basil comes out pretty much at the top.

    Above: A native carpenter bee visits African blue basil.

    Native plant advocates might frown at a non-native being promoted for pollinators, but there are some mitigating factors to consider. Not everyone has the space for a collection of native perennials chosen for a bloom-sequence staggered for months-long interest (with a couple of exceptions, most perennials tend to flower for just a few weeks). And some perennials, like milkweeds and bee balms, resent being potted and perform best in-ground. City gardeners are often confined to containers, while most urban dwellers have no more than a windowsill to grow anything. African blue basil fits this demographic perfectly.

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    A swarm of 20,000 bees followed a car for two days, determined to rescue their queen trapped inside.

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  • U.S. honey bee population reaches record high

    U.S. honey bee population reaches record high

    U.S. honey bee population reaches record high – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In 2006, bees across the U.S. started dying rapidly. Now, the U.S. honey bee population is at an all-time high, according to the Census of Agriculture. Clay Bolt, manager of pollinator conservation for the World Wildlife Fund U.S., joins CBS News to explain what happened.

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  • Her toddler heard monsters in the wall. Turns out, the noise was more than 50,000 bees that produced 100 pounds of honeycomb

    Her toddler heard monsters in the wall. Turns out, the noise was more than 50,000 bees that produced 100 pounds of honeycomb

    A mom has gone viral on TikTok after sharing her toddler was hearing a “monster” in her bedroom walls. Turns out, the noise was actually a colony of more than 50,000 bees.

    Ashley Class shared on TikTok that her daughter was scared of monsters in their Charlotte, North Carolina house, which is more than 100 years old. 

    The 3-year-old, who had just seen the Disney and Pixar film “Monsters Inc.,” was insistent about the monsters in her wall, Class told BBC News. “We even gave her a bottle of water and said it was monster spray so that she could spray away any of the monsters at night,” she said. 

    But soon, Class noticed bees swarming near her attic chimney, and thought her daughter might be on to something. They called pest control and using a thermal camera, a common tool used by beekeepers, they realized there was a colony of bees behind the wall. 

    Class’ video about the bee discovery received more than 9 million views on TikTok, and she continued to share updates on the bee debacle on her @classashley page. 

    A local beekeeper performed extractions to get the bees out – finding 20,000 bees and 100 pounds of honeycomb on the first day. 

    “They just came pouring out like a horror movie,” Class told BBC News.

    Class said in another TikTok video “it only takes a couple of bees and a swarm that you may not be able to see to become a colony that’s 50,000 bees.”

    The beekeeper told her that the bees took eight months to create 100 pounds of honeycomb – which was so heavy, they needed to triple-bag it to carry it out.

    “The beekeeper and I did not realize how many bees were in that wall when he decided to open it up. Even though the thermal cam showed there was a lot of activity, he greatly underestimated,” she said. “And it’s not his fault because it’s not usual that bees bury downward.”

    She said the bees got into the wall through a dime-size hole in a pipe in their chimney, traveling down into the wall of her daughter’s room. The beekeeper broke multiple holes in the wall to get the bees out. 

    The beekeeper eventually removed 50,000 bees and was able to save the queen bee. The plan was to relocate the bees to a honeycomb sanctuary where the colony can continue their work.

    They sealed up the holes in the wall, but because of the amount of honey the bees produced, the tape used to seal the wall was not sticking, allowing more bees into the room. 

    Thousands of bees still remained after what they thought would be the last extraction and honey covered the floors of her daughter’s room. And yes, Class did get stung a few times during the process. 

    CBS News has reached out to Class on social media and is awaiting response. 

    On Monday, she posted on TikTok that the beekeeper did a third extraction to try and remove the remaining bees.

    The extraction process cost Class an estimated $20,000 in damage and also damaged the electric wiring of her home. Class said in a TikTok video that her homeowner’s insurance won’t cover the pest problem.

    But her daughter now has a new hero: the beekeeper, whom she calls a “monster hunter.”

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  • Virginia sees bills to ease process for claiming roadkill, change how many mixed drinks restaurants can sell – WTOP News

    Virginia sees bills to ease process for claiming roadkill, change how many mixed drinks restaurants can sell – WTOP News

    Hundreds of bills are filed for General Assembly consideration each year. In this weekly series, the Mercury takes a look…

    This article was reprinted with permission from Virginia Mercury

    Hundreds of bills are filed for General Assembly consideration each year. In this weekly series, the Mercury takes a look at a few of lawmakers’ 2024 proposals that might not otherwise make headlines during the whirlwind legislative session.

    House Bill 1025: Letting more people claim roadkill

    This bill from Del. Tony Wilt, R-Harrisonburg, allows any person to claim a deer, bear, turkey or elk that appears to have been killed in a motor vehicle collision. Under current law, only the person who hits a deer or bear with their vehicle is permitted to claim the dead animal.

    Wilt told the House Natural Resources Subcommittee last month that the animal can only be claimed once it is reported to the Department of Wildlife Resources or local law enforcement.

    “If you’ve hit a deer and maybe it’s put your car out of commission, if I come along, I can call the department and they can give me permission to take the animal,” Wilt said.

    His bill would also permit the person who claims the animal to use it for whatever purposes they want, including eating it or claiming the head as a trophy. Some subcommittee members, like Del. Rob Bloxom, R-Accomack, raised concerns that allowing people to eat roadkill whose time and manner of death are unknown could be dangerous.

    Wilt said that “if you see an animal lying on the road and it’s blown up twice its size, it’s probably not a good bet … but you still have to get permission.”

    “If you feel brave enough that you want to chance it,” he added, “you would have that opportunity under this legislation.”

    When asked what problem Wilt’s legislation is looking to solve, the delegate told the subcommittee that it would help to alleviate some of the Virginia Department of Transportation’s workload. The department is responsible for collecting dead animals on the side of the road and then transporting them to landfills.

    The fiscal impact statement on the legislation also notes the bill could result in a reduction of Class 2 misdemeanors, the punishment for violating the current law, and could possibly decrease jail populations and costs to the state.

    The legislation passed the House unanimously.

    Senate Bill 168: Reducing the food-to-beverage ratio for restaurants serving mixed drinks

    SB 168 from Sen. Bryce Reeves, R-Fredericksburg, would increase the amount of mixed beverages a licensed restaurant can serve based on average monthly food sales, replacing the current mandatory 45% food-to-beverage ratio enforced by the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority.

    The legislation would set a 35% food-to-beverage ratio for restaurants with monthly food sales of between $4,000 and $10,000 and impose no ratio on those with monthly food sales of over $10,000.

    Reeves told the Senate ABC Subcommittee last month his bill “greatly benefits restaurants across the commonwealth who are greatly limited by antiquated ABC regulations.”

    The current law has been a long-running concern for many restaurant owners, especially those that sell expensive spirits. McCormack’s Whisky Grill in Richmond, for example, has run into trouble with the law for exceeding the ratio, even though some of the top-shelf liquor it sells — like a $2,000 shot of Macallan M whiskey — can make it nearly impossible to meet state targets.

    Robert Melvin with right-leaning think tank R Street Institute told the subcommittee that Reeves’ legislation is beneficial for consumers who want to take advantage of craft cocktail establishments seen in other states like New York.

    He also pointed out customers who don’t drink alcoholic beverages at restaurants can also feel the impacts of the ratio: In 2014, ABC raised liquor prices throughout the commonwealth due to state budget shortfalls. “As a result,” he said, “that goes and impacts the food-to-beverage ratio for the restaurant, and then the restaurants raise the food prices as well.”

    While no legislators or stakeholders spoke in opposition to the bill, previous attempts to change the ratio have produced spirited debate in the General Assembly. In 2015, then-Senate Minority Leader Dick Saslaw, D-Fairfax, declared, “If you can’t meet that ratio, you ain’t running a restaurant, you are running a bar. If you want saloons in Virginia, say so.”

    Reeves’ bill unanimously passed the Senate.


    More from this series:


    House Bill 517: Designating the European honey bee as the official state pollinator

    This legislation from Del. Patrick Hope, D-Arlington, would designate the European honey bee as the official pollinator of Virginia.

    The delegate told a House subcommittee last month he’s carrying the bill for over 1,000 Virginians who signed a petition requesting the insect be the official state pollinator.

    The European honey bee, said the delegate, is integral to the success of agricultural industries and native Virginia plants. The insect was also crucial in guaranteeing the success of the Jamestown settlement — where it was first introduced in North America — as it allowed European colonists to pollinate non-native fruits and vegetables they brought, like apples, potatoes and peaches.

    If the king of England had not sent honey bee colonies to Jamestown, Hope said, “we may not have had a successful Jamestown settlement, and, of course, [honey bees] wouldn’t be in North America.”

    The honey bee also has a significant impact on Virginia’s economy. Hope said fruits and vegetables pollinated by the insect have brought over $116 million in profits for the state annually, as well as $1 million from honey sales.

    Del. Buddy Fowler, R-Hanover, said that “as someone who lives on a farm, we would have no agriculture to speak of without the honey bee.”

    Subcommittee Chair Del. Paul Krizek, D-Alexandria, agreed it’s important to recognize the bee for the work it does but reminded Hope that it’s also important to protect native pollinators and plants. While the honey bee was imported by Europeans, there are roughly 4,000 species of bees that are native to North America, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

    Krizek also said he is “perturbed” that there are non-native Nandina trees planted on the General Assembly grounds, which can cause certain birds to die if they eat the tree’s berries.

    “I would like to see us work together and try to get a native garden planted out in front [of the General Assembly building] with native plants,” Krizek said. “That would be good for your pollinator and other Virginia pollinators, so that’s something we need to work on.”

    Hope’s bill passed the House unanimously.



    Ivy Lyons

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  • When well-intended environmentalism backfires

    When well-intended environmentalism backfires


    In the late 1990s, my grandfather bought a mail-order bat box as a natural approach to mosquito management. The dark green plywood roost was mounted on tall wooden poles on a sunny patch in the yard and stabilized with tension wires. The catalog promised that the bats would raise their pups inside the box and feast on the mosquitoes that swarmed my grandparents’ lakefront yard.

    The bat box always seemed like an undisputed win for all parties (save the mosquitoes). But when I started researching a bat box for our mosquito-plagued property in North Carolina, I learned that some off-the-shelf boxes, like the kind my grandfather used, are essentially bat ovens. In hot months, artificial roosts that are poorly located, too small, darkly painted, or insufficiently ventilated can reach lethal temperatures, killing bat pups.

    This knowledge rattled me, and I suspect it would have deeply upset my grandfather, who took great pride in his environmental stewardship. But this is how science is supposed to work—hypothesize, test, share, tweak, repeat. Sometimes it’s a bummer, but how else can we know if our corrective measures do what we want?

    In 2021, several experts debated in the pages of Conservation Science and Practice whether it helped bats to publicize the potential lethality of a bat box. “Telling people their well-intended conservation efforts are wrong is rarely productive,” wrote Virgil Brack Jr. and Dale W. Sparks, principal scientists at Environmental Solutions & Innovations, Inc. The subjects of their critique, Reed D. Crawford and Joy M. O’Keefe of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, replied that they would continue to raise awareness “that the cavalier use of unsuitable boxes could expose bats to deadly temperatures.” Both parties agreed the design and deployment of artificial roosts could and should be improved. Once again, the reckoning is uncomfortable but necessary.

    Amateur apiarists are rethinking a few things as well. Once considered the environmentalist equivalent of a victory garden, the European honeybee hives that were established in backyards and rooftops around the U.S. in the early 2010s following reports of “colony collapse” could “actually have a negative influence on native and wild bee populations through floral resource competition and pathogen transmission,” according to research published in 2023 by conservationists at Concordia University and the University of Montreal.

    “For people who say they want to save the bees and they have a honeybee hive, it’s kind of like throwing Asian carp into the Great Lakes and saying you want to save the native fish,” York University conservation professor Sheila Colla told The Washington Post in May 2023.

    The undesirable effects of good intentions scale up pretty quickly when government policy drives environmental efforts. In August, Science reported that 2020 emissions regulations imposed by the United Nations’ International Maritime Organization had the desired effect of reducing the amount of sulfur that ships released into the air, as well as the undesired effect of simultaneously reducing the volume of sulfur-based clouds, called “ship tracks,” that form along shipping routes and reflect the sun away from the Earth.

    “By dramatically reducing the number of ship tracks, the planet has warmed up faster,” explained Science reporter Paul Voosen. “That trend is magnified in the Atlantic, where maritime traffic is particularly dense. In the shipping corridors, the increased light represents a 50% boost to the warming effect of human carbon emissions.”

    In China, ambitious government subsidies for green energy projects in the late 2010s spurred an explosion in electric vehicle (E.V.) development that is now readily apparent in the car graveyards around the country where obsolete E.V.s have been abandoned. “Not only are the sites an eyesore,” reported Bloomberg News in 2023, but “getting rid of EVs so quickly reduces their climate benefit considering they’re more emissions-intensive to build and only produce an advantage over combustion cars after a few years.”

    There are even policies where personal conservation and governmental environmental policy collide in a spectacularly horrifying fashion. In a September essay titled “We Thought We Were Saving the Planet, but We Were Planting a Time Bomb” in The New York Times, Canadian novelist and essayist Claire Cameron recounted her own personal reckoning with the time she spent planting trees on logging land in Ontario, only to learn years later that her efforts helped fuel forest fires.

    “This was a common—if notoriously grueling—rite of passage for Canadian university students, since it allowed you to make good money while spending a few months outdoors with other like-minded young people. I was driven in part by the idealistic view that planting a tree was always going to be better than not planting one.”

    Except the trees they were planting were all the same species, water-thirsty and highly flammable, neatly spaced six feet apart. “Much later, I learned that the trees we were planting, black spruce, are so combustible that firefighters call them gas on a stick. The trees evolved to burn: They have flammable sap, and their resin-filled cones open up when heated to drop seeds into charred soil.” To make matters more complicated still, the tree-planting program was managed by private timber companies but driven by government incentives.

    For some, these unintended consequences will elicit schadenfreude; for others, despair. But there is a silver lining in these revelations, which is that we learn something new every day, month, and year about what kinds of eco-stewardship produce good results as well as what those results cost. While government bodies are not Bayesian actors, individuals and private firms can be. At the human scale, we can react and adapt to new knowledge, avoid or abandon well-meaning disasters, and make choices that have a positive impact on our local ecology.

    In some cases, the best thing you can do for the environment is leave it well enough alone. Bats, it turns out, are naturally drawn to roosting in dead tree trunks. My property is full of them.



    Mike Riggs

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  • 165 best bee jokes and bee puns to get you buzzing – Growing Family

    165 best bee jokes and bee puns to get you buzzing – Growing Family

    If you’re looking for a light-hearted giggle, make a beeline for this hive of bee puns and bee jokes!

    I’ve rounded up my favourite bee puns and bee jokes to make you smile. They’re great bee humour for school projects, greetings card messages, photo captions, or just a bit of fun!

    Make a beeline for these fun bee jokes and bee puns! Great for a giggle, and handy inspiration for your bee picture captions and greetings card messages.

    Fun bee jokes

    Here are some of my favourite funny bee jokes (or should that be honey bee jokes!?) to get you buzzing.

    Why do bees hum? Because they can’t remember the words.

    What did the bee say to the flower? Hey bud!

    What do you call a bee thats returned from the dead? A zombee.

    Which bee gives you a second chance? The plan bee.

    What’s another name for a wasp? A wanna-bee.

    I went to the bee keepers to buy some bees. All the bees had price tags on them except one. It was a freebie.

    What did the bee say to the naughty bee? Bee-hive yourself.

    What do bees chew? Bumble gum.

    Which singers do bees love? Sting, Bee-yonce and the Bee Gees.

    What do bees do when their friend moves into a new hive? They throw them a house swarming party.

    What do you call a bee who is having a bad hair day? A Frizz-bee.

    What’s black and yellow and flies at 30,000 feet? A bee on an aeroplane.

    What do you call a bee that’s been put under a spell? Bee-witched.

    Which sport do bees like the most? Rug-bee.

    What do you call a Bee that works for the government? A pollentician.

    What do you call a bumble bee trying to make up its mind? A maybee.

    I’m holding a bee in my hands- what is in my eye? Beauty.

    What’s another name for a baby bee? A little humbug.

    Who says “zzub zzub zzub”? A bee flying backwards.

    What do you call a bee that’s hard to understand? A mumble-bee.

    bee on purple flowersbee on purple flowers

    A few more funny bee jokes for kids

    What’s a bee’s favourite sport? Rug-bee.

    A bumblebee, a spelling bee and a vitamin B got in a fight. The vitamin B1.

    What do you get if you cross a horse with a bee? Neigh buzz.

    Why are bees good at job interviews? Because they know all of the buzz-words.

    What kind of bee hums and drop things? A fumble bee.

    What’s a honey bee’s favourite kind of flower?  A Bee-gonia.

    How does a queen bee get around her hive? She’s throne.

    What would bears be without bees? Just ears.

    What do you call a beehive with no exits? Unbelievable.

    Where did Noah keep his bees? In the ark hives.

    What do you call a bee that falls down a hill? A stumble bee.

    The best bee puns

    There’s certainly no shortage of funny bee puns! Here are some of my favourite puns about bees.

    As luck would hive it

    Be on your best beehive-iour

    Swarm today, isn’t it?

    Bee-witched

    Hive it your way

    We bee-long together

    Bee mine

    I’ll bee there

    You’d better bee-lieve it

    Bee cool

    It’s bee-hind you

    School buzz

    Just bee yourself

    You’re pollen my leg

    Bee afraid, bee very afraid

    Hive never felt this way bee-fore

    Let it bee

    Bee-lieve in yourself

    None of your beeswax

    Bee Whizz

    Misbeehaving

    Bee-hive yourself

    A dose of vitamin bee

    Bee yourself

    I hive a dream

    Un-bee-lievable

    Truth bee told

    Born to bee wild

    Sending swarm wishes

    And of course… Buzz off!

    Honey puns and honey jokes

    Why do bees have sticky hair? Because they use honey combs.

    What’s a bee’s favourite body part? Their hon-knees.

    Where do bees keep their savings? In a honey box.

    What do bees say when they get home from work? Hi honey, I’m home!

    What do bees do with their honey? They cell it.

    Your honey or your life

    Honey, you’re so sweet

    Get your honey’s worth

    You’re so honey

    Honey-thing is possible

    Honey, I’m home!

    You’re sweeter than honey

    Honey, I’m stuck on you

    I’m having an epip-honey

    Honey, comb here

    closeup of a bee covered in pollencloseup of a bee covered in pollen

    More hilarious bee puns

    You’re bee-autiful

    Meant to bee

    A force to bee reckoned with

    Buzz word

    Hive mind

    A hive of activity

    I don’t hive a clue

    Hive five

    Hive a nice day

    The hive’s the limit

    Queen bee

    Like pollen teeth

    Pollen power

    Beauty is in the eye of the bee-holder

    Bee positive

    Bee prepared

    Bee my love

    Bee-ware

    Bee the change

    bee on pink flowerbee on pink flower

    Even more brilliant bee puns

    To bee or not to bee

    Buzzing with excitement

    That’s ap-pollen

    I’ve pollen in love

    I’m bee-sotted

    I promise I don’t sting

    Not all it’s cracked up to bee

    I want to bee alone

    Not too shab-bee

    Appearances can bee deceiving

    Pollen is nothing to sneeze at

    Give me a buzz

    Having a buzzy day

    Stop droning on

    I mean bees-ness

    On my best bee-haviour

    The bee’s knees

    Just winging it

    I’d do honey-thing for you

    Busy bee

    Make a bee-line for it

    These bee puns really sting!

    Ready for more bee jokes?

    What do bees call a pretentious wasp? Plain snob-bee.

    What do you call a ghost bee? A bee boo.

    What’s a happy bumblebee’s blood type? Bee positive.

    What do you call a bee that’s always complaining? A grumblebee.

    What goes zzub-zubb when it travels? A bee flying backwards.

    What did one bee say to the other when they landed on the same flower? “Buzz off.”

    What vitamin does a bumble bee take? Vitamin Bee. 

    How do bees invite their friends to a party? They send out pollen-vitations.

    What do you call a bee that’s a bad loser? A cry bay-bee.

    Why do bees skydive? Because they like the adrenaline buzz.

    What do you call a bee that needs a drink? Bee-hydrated.

    How can bees fly in the rain? They wear little yellow jackets.

    What’s more dangerous than being with a fool? Fooling with a bee.

    What do you call honey on a bee? A sticky situation.

    When do bees get married? When they’ve found their honey.

    What did the team of bees do after they won the game? They celebrated with hive fives.

    Why did the bee visit the dermatologist? It had hives.

    What do you call a swarm of really small queen bees? The royal wee.

    What do you get if you cross a bee and a dog? A bee-gle.

    How do bees communicate with each other? They use bee-mail.

    What did the bee bank robber say to the tellers? “Your honey or your life.”

    What do you call a bee that can’t stop talking? Blab-bee.

    Why did the bee deliver a cold pizza? He didn’t know where to buzz in.

    Who looks after baby bees? Ba-bee sitters.

    What do bees like with their sushi? Wasa-bee.

    What do you get when you cross a bee with a doorbell? A hum-dinger.

    What do you call a bee that was born in May? A may-bee.

    How do bees get to work? On the buzz.

    What do you call bears without ears? Bees.

    Why do bees love summer? Because it’s swarm outside.

    What did the bee say to his girlfriend? “I’ve pollen in love with you.”

    What did the bee say to the flower? “Hi, honey!”

    What do you call a bee that doesn’t cost anything? A free-bee.

    What do bees ask for at the barber shop?  A buzz cut.

    What’s a bee’s favourite fast food? Hum-burgers.

    What’s a bee’s favorite painter?  Pablo bee-casso.

    What’s a bee’s favourite flower? A bee-gonia.

    What’s a bee’s favorite composer? Bee-thoven.

    What’s a bee’s favorite novel?  The Great Gats-bee.

    What’s a bee’s favorite sport?  Rug-bee.

    What’s a bee’s favourite shape? A rhom-buzz.

    What’s a bee’s favourite toy? Buzz Lightyear.

    What’s a bee’s favorite singer? Bee-yoncé.

    What’s a bee’s favourite gemstone? Ru-bees.

    Where do bees like to go on holiday? Sting-apore.

    Where else do bees like to go on holiday? The bee-ch. (more beach puns here)

    What philosophical question always confuses bees? To bee or not to bee.

    What do you call a bee that lives in America? A USB.

    What’s the worst part about getting stung by bees? Tomorrow you’re going to have to take care of those hives.

    I hope you don’t think these bees jokes and cute bee puns are too shab-bee! 🐝 🐝 🐝

    More funny garden puns and garden jokes

    I hope you’ve enjoyed this roundup of jokes about bees and bee puns. For more funny puns and jokes, check out my other posts:

    Garden puns and garden jokes

    Flower puns and flower jokes

    Sunflower puns and sunflower jokes

    Nature puns and nature jokes

    Ice puns and water jokes

    Cat puns and cat jokes

    Puns about birds and bird jokes

    Art puns and art jokes

    Fish jokes and fish puns

    Garden gnome puns and gnome jokes

    Tree jokes & tree puns

    Fruit puns & fruit jokes

    Bean jokes and bean puns

    Vegetable puns and vegetable jokes

    Potato puns and potato jokes

    Pumpkin puns and pumpkin jokes

    Skull puns and skull jokes

    Plant puns and plant jokes

    Spring puns and spring jokes and Easter jokes for kids

    Summer jokes for kids

    Fall puns and fall jokes for autumn fun

    Halloween jokes for kids and Halloween puns

    Christmas jokes for kids

    You might also like my post on garden quotes which has lots of inspiring sayings about plants, flowers and gardening, and my flower quotes, nature captions and nature quotes, quotes about sunflowers, tree quotes and waterfall quotes posts which have some lovely uplifting quotes about nature. I’ve also got an article listing the best nature hashtags that will help you share your posts far and wide on social media.

    Fun nature activities for kids

    I’ve also co-written two books called *‘A Year of Nature Craft and Play’ and *A Year of Nature Walks and Games’ which are all about getting kids engaged with nature. Each one is filled with fun games, walks, crafts, gardening and science activities that inspire kids to get creative with nature and explore the amazing natural world.  There are 52 budget-friendly nature play ideas, one for every week of the year, all with easy-to-follow instructions and colourful photos. If you’d like to encourage the kids to get outdoors more they’re well worth a look!

    More garden and nature inspiration

    For more gardening and nature inspiration you might like to take a look at these posts:

    Easy ways to make your garden bee-friendly

    How to make a DIY bee hotel

    Birth month flowers by month

    Garden jobs month by month

    What to plant gardening calendar

    If you’ve enjoyed this post and found it useful, here are some ways you can say thanks and support Growing Family:

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    Pin for later: the best bee puns and bee jokes

    Make a beeline for these fun bee jokes and bee puns! Great for a giggle, and handy inspiration for your bee picture captions and greetings card messages.Make a beeline for these fun bee jokes and bee puns! Great for a giggle, and handy inspiration for your bee picture captions and greetings card messages.

    Catherine

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  • Native Bees: How to Help the At-Risk Pollinators

    Native Bees: How to Help the At-Risk Pollinators

    “The priority in gardening is no longer just about mastering an aesthetic,” says Bishop. “There is a shift toward being more mindful and ethical. We need to embrace the natural systems that we’ve just forgotten about.” Here’s what you can do at home. 

    Above: These tiny masked bees are solitary, nesting in twigs and stems. Since they’re so small, they prefer small flowers, even “ones we might not really notice, like those found in an alternative lawn” says Kornbluth. Because of their size, they can go deep inside flowers to get nectar. Not particularly hairy, they don’t carry pollen on their bodies, like other bees, but carry it in their “’crop,’ the upper part of the digestive tract.” This masked bee was spotted foraging on snakeroot in Bishop’s garden. 

    Grow native plants in your garden. 

    Native insects coevolved with native plants. They’re part of an intricate food web system. For most organisms, non-native plants are like “plastic fruit in a fruit bowl,” says Kornbluth. “It may look good, but they won’t be able to eat it.” While nectar-eating insects are able to enjoy the sugary, calorie-rich nectar from a wide range of flowers, “pollen, which bees need to feed their young, is more likely to come from the local native species that they have been coevolving with them for many thousands of years,” says Kornbluth. (At Perfect Earth Project, we advocate for at least two-thirds native plants in your garden.)

    Don’t use pesticides. 

    Even organic ones. Pesticides (and that includes insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides) don’t discriminate and will kill all insects—not just the ones you’re targeting. When selecting plants at the nursery, ask if they’ve been treated with pesticides of any kind, especially neonicotinoids, a systemic insecticide that is absorbed by the entire plant rendering every part poisonous to pollinators. 

    Above: Male longhorn bees feature very long antennae. These bees are specialists of Asteraceae, and especially love sunflowers. Look for them buzzing about in July and August. 

    Provide nesting spots.

    Native bees nest in the ground and in stems and wood piles. “It’s important to remember that the standing dead vegetation you see is full of bees,” says Kornbluth. Try not to cut back stems when flowers are done blooming, but leave them for the bees. If you’re concerned about how that’s going to look, visit The Battery, says Bishop, and see how pretty it is all winter long. “Embracing a plant’s complete life cycle—from seedlings in spring to seed head or grass mound in winter—is a Piet Oudolf trademark,” says Bishop of the visionary Dutch landscape designer who created the garden’s master plan. “By not deadheading, we allow the life cycle to stay on display and integrate into design year-round. And this decay becomes abundant living matter and nest material for pollinators.” It’s also beautiful. “I love the aesthetic: the decay, structure, and different textures of every plant—they each have their own kind of personality,” says Bishop.

    But if you must cut some stems back, Kornbluth advises leaving last year’s stems as high as you can. While you’re at it, leave the leaves. In addition to feeding the soil, fallen leaves provide insulation for ground-nesters, like bumblebees and mining bees, as well as other hibernating organisms. “It prevents the surface of the earth from getting too cold, which impacts their survival over the winter,” says Kornbluth.

    Look and learn.

    “Do a small insect safari at home,” suggests Kornbluth. Bishop has been doing this in her own backyard in Westchester, New York, and happily admits the glee she feels when finding new species in her garden. “Give yourself the opportunity to be meditative and peaceful,” says Kornbluth. See who’s coming to eat. What do you notice about them? What plants are they visiting? When are they appearing? Share what you find on iNaturalist. “The whole process is very eye-opening, engaging, and connecting.” 

    See also:

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  • Urban beekeeping project works to restore honey bee populations with hives all over Washington, D.C.

    Urban beekeeping project works to restore honey bee populations with hives all over Washington, D.C.

    From rooftops to government gardens, embassies to office buildings, if you know where to look, you’ll find honey bees buzzing all over Washington, D.C.

    The cityscape has become a hospitable home to the pollinators. About 15 years ago, honey bee populations hit an all-time low, so in 2014, former President Barack Obama launched a national strategy to protect and promote the insects. Bees and other pollinators are critical to the global food supply, pollinating about a third of the world’s crops and three-fourths of all flowering plants. 

    Soon after Obama’s strategy was launched, hives were humming at government facilities across the country. 

    Some live in unassuming boxes at a secure compound near the U.S. State Department. They’re team-oriented, mission-focused drones, making them the perfect federal employees. The sweet honey they produce is just a bonus. 

    “We try to keep them apolitical,” joked Keith Hanigan, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary in charge of operations. He’s also in charge of the building’s bees. 

    “Bees is really one of the most important things I do here for the State Department,” Hanigan said. “We wanted to do our part, and we (knew) that other agencies were getting involved as well. So it seemed like something small and simple that we could do.” 

    Thanks to the diligent efforts of beekeepers, the honey bee population has largely rebounded and stabilized over the past few years, even as pesticides, mites and habitat loss still pose a threat. 

    While bees historically haven’t gotten very good buzz, the project is helping rehabilitate their image. 

    “I think now you see them and you want to nurture them, you want to take care of them,” Hanigan said. “I think it’s really raised the awareness, certainly for me, but I think for a lot of our staff.” 

    Urban beekeepers like Solomon Jeong say that education efforts are also helping to win over hearts and minds. 

    “A lot more people are more aware of like, how important (bees) are, as well as how cute they are,” Jeong said. “If you see a photo, they’re fuzzy and round. It’s almost like a teddy bear or something.”

    Teaching people about bee habits also helps, Jeong said. 

    “(Honey bees are) not going to be interested in you or your food. They’re not going to be like ‘Oh, there’s a human, let’s go sting them,’” Jeong said. 

    The bees aren’t just on U.S. government buildings. On the rooftop of the Canadian embassy, there are tens of thousands of bees, led by queen bees nicknamed “Bee-Once” and “Celine Bee-on.” 

    Sean Robertson, who manages the facility for the Canadian government, said the bees churn out about 100 jars of honey each year. 

    “I often say it’s one of my favorite parts of my job, actually coming up here and getting to work with the bees,” Robertson said. 

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  • US land managers call off pesticide spraying near the Rio Chama to kill invasive grasshoppers

    US land managers call off pesticide spraying near the Rio Chama to kill invasive grasshoppers

    SANTA FE, N.M. — Federal land managers have called off plans to spray pesticides near the Rio Chama in northern New Mexico as part of an effort to eradicate invasive grasshoppers.

    The decision announced Thursday by the Bureau of Land Management followed an outcry by environmentalists and others who worried that dispersing 670 gallons (2,536 liters) of carbaryl — a potent neurotoxin — would also kill bees, monarch butterflies and other insects vital to the area’s ecosystem.

    Although the U.S. Agriculture Department conducted an environmental assessment earlier this year, the Bureau of Land Management said additional analysis and outreach was needed.

    “Due to the time needed to carry out additional analysis, the project cannot be achieved this season and will no longer take place. We will continue to work on this important issue in partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service,” said Pamela Mathis, the BLM’s Taos field manager.

    The plan called for spraying the pesticide across 39 square miles (101 square kilometers) in Rio Arriba County. The U.S. Agriculture Department had concluded that grasshoppers had proliferated to the level deemed a severe outbreak and would not only consume grasses essential to grazing cattle but also would pose a threat to the ecosystem.

    Recent surveys in the area tallied 35 grasshoppers per square yard, or more than quadruple the eight per yard considered an outbreak and a threat to rangeland ecosystems, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported.

    The Xerces Society and other environmental groups argued that the pesticide could inflict widespread collateral damage for the ecosystem. Some critics also noted that the chemical has been found to be carcinogenic to humans.

    Aimee Code, Xerces’ pesticide program director, acknowledged that the agencies’ initial action was centered on helping ranchers.

    “Now we’ve taken a step back and said ‘let’s figure out what’s the right solution for the ranchers, for the recreationalists, for the tribes and the pueblos, for the many people that use this area and the wildlife that are there.’” Code said.

    Federal officials had planned to set up no-spray buffers 500 feet (152 meters) from water bodies and a quarter-mile from riparian areas such as the Chama, Nutrias and Cebolla rivers. But critics were concerned that the pesticide would drift into other locations.

    Terry Sloan, director of Albuquerque-based Southwest Native Cultures, said he feared that any contamination of the Rio Chama could flow downstream to the Rio Grande and ultimately farms and tribal lands along the two waterways.

    “Mother Earth and her inhabitants win,” Sloan said in a statement. “… More work ahead, with public and tribal consultation, as we figure out a natural and or Indigenous way to address the grasshopper problem.”

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  • “Cloud of hundreds of bees” swarms Los Angeles neighborhood, sending 2 to hospital

    “Cloud of hundreds of bees” swarms Los Angeles neighborhood, sending 2 to hospital

    1 sent to hospital after hundreds of bees swarm Encino neighborhood


    1 sent to hospital after hundreds of bees swarm Encino neighborhood

    02:41

    Hundreds of bees swarmed the Los Angeles neighborhood of Encino Monday, and authorities said that the chaos that ensued resulted in two people, including one police volunteer, being sent to the hospital. 

    “There is like a cloud of hundreds of bees over there,” Izak Kharrazi of local bee removal company All Valley Honey & Bee told CBS News Los Angeles. “I said, ‘oh boy’… that’s why right away I put my gear on, because I can see them. They’re mad as could be.” 

    At least two people were injured, including one adult man who had “multiple bee stings,” according to the fire department, and an LAPD volunteer who was hurt while trying to get away from the swarm and received “dozens of bee stings.” 

    CBS Los Angeles captured video of the swarm attack on the latter, which shows the volunteer officer attempting to swat the bees away as he was trying to get into a vehicle. He quickly starts attempting to swat them off his head and face, and ultimately stumbles and falls onto the road, apparently hard-hitting his head on the asphalt. 

    The condition of the first man is unknown, but police said that their volunteer has been hospitalized and is in “stable condition.” 

    One local resident, Jerry Spotts, told CBS Los Angeles that he also saw a UPS delivery driver being attacked by the swarm. 

    “He started saying, ‘run, bees!’ And I got hit right in the lip,” Spotts said. 

    It’s believed that the bees may have originated from a hive that was fixed to a home in the neighborhood, CBS Los Angeles reports. The bee removal company on the scene sprayed the hive in an attempt to eradicate the swarm. As that was being conducted, the fire department issued a warning for residents to “remain indoors and close all windows/doors.” 

    “This is not a normal behavior for these bees to be this angry, to want to kill you,” Kharrazi said. “This is not OK.”

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  • Thousands Of Bees Swarm Florida Highway After Truck Carrying Hives Crashes

    Thousands Of Bees Swarm Florida Highway After Truck Carrying Hives Crashes

    Something quite un-bee-lievable happened on a Florida highway this week.

    A pickup truck transporting beehives, which were home to around 1 million bees, collided with a tractor-trailer Tuesday morning, releasing a swarm of bees onto the road.

    The shocking incident happened on U.S. Route 301 in Duval County at around 3:15 a.m.

    After the wreck, thousands of escapee bees buzzed around the area, the Florida Highway Patrol said. However, they were reportedly not aggressive.

    FHP did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment.

    Trent Padgett — the owner of Jesup Bee Company and the driver of the truck carrying the bees — told local news outlet WJXT that he was traveling to the city of Lawtey to make honey when the collision took place.

    “We both had a green light, but the semitruck made a U-turn there without a turn signal,” Padgett said of the crash. “I didn’t see it coming, so I just hit right at the front end of the truck.”

    He added: “A lot of bees got lost. A lot of them flew away. There’s a lot of dead bees on the highway that came from those boxes.”

    Padgett told WJXT that he allegedly lost $40,000 worth of bees in the incident.

    No injuries were reported, FHP said. But the wreck caused significant buzz in the area.

    A beekeeper was called in to wrangle many of the winged insects, and local motorists were instructed to use caution.

    The highway returned to normal activity by 7 a.m. or 7:30 a.m., the Florida Times-Union reported.

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  • USDA approves vaccine for honeybees, biotech company says

    USDA approves vaccine for honeybees, biotech company says

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved a conditional license for a vaccine that protects honeybees against American Foulbrood disease, Dalan Animal Health, the biotech company behind the drug, announced Wednesday.

    The disease, which is caused by Paenibacillus larvae, infects the bee’s larvae. Traditionally, when bees get sick with American Foulbrood disease, their hives, as well as any equipment in contact with the infected hives, must be incinerated, the statement said. This in turn, reduces the honeybee population, and in turn, affects the world’s food supply. 

    This new vaccine is the first of its kind to prevent this from happening, the biotech company said.

    The vaccine, which contains a dead cell of the virus, is administered to the bees through the queen feed that worker bees consume. The worker bees then transfer the vaccine into the royal jelly and feed it to the queen. As a result, the vaccine gets deposited into her ovaries, giving larvae immunity when they hatch.

    The drug is non-GMO, Dalan Animal Health said, and can be utilized in organic farming.

    Honeybees are an important part of agriculture as they pollinate crops needed to supply the world’s food supply, Dalan Animal Health explained.     

    “This is an exciting step forward for beekeepers, as we rely on antibiotic treatment that has limited effectiveness and requires lots of time and energy to apply to our hives,” said Trevor Tauzer, a board member of the California State Beekeepers Association, in the news release. “If we can prevent an infection in our hives, we can avoid costly treatments and focus our energy on other important elements of keeping our bees healthy.”  

    Dalan Animal Health develops immune treatments for invertebrates to prevent harmful diseases from spreading amongst honeybees, shrimp, worms and other insects.


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  • Even Allergic, This Scientist Found an Innovative Way To Save the Bees

    Even Allergic, This Scientist Found an Innovative Way To Save the Bees

    When we think of bees in decline, we often think about pesticides and a lack of food (itself linked to human environmental destruction). However, another big factor is parasites (like varroa mites). When a then-16-year-old teen from Connecticut, Raina Singhvi Jain, learned about these parasites and the declining bee population, she made it her mission to help save the bees. Even since learning she was allergic (a sting that had her out of commission for two weeks), Jain understands their importance and, now at 20, has helped develop a technology to aid in the fight against the parasites.

    Jain 3D printed a device called HiveGuard, and it acts as an entryway for bees. She told CNN, “As bees pass through the entranceway, the thymol rubs off onto the body of the bee, where ultimately the concentration kills the varroa mites, but the honeybee is left unharmed.” 70% of the bees that go through the entrance (dozens of times a day) have these parasitic mites killed. Killing varroa mites also helps fight against the human-caused decline since mite-less bees have better health and immunity. While we just learned about her efforts, Jain has been talking about these entranceways for a few years and even secured funding to help expand this project.

    Since working on the project, she also started The Queen Bee, a business that sells what bees make in their hives. The website states, “I used to take raw honey and royal jelly straight from the hive and mix it with ginger and turmeric to create an elixir immunity shot, a recipe passed down from my grandmother.” According to the website, for each bottle sold, they plant one pollinator tree so that it acts as a self-sustainable business.

    “Save the bees” may seem like just a catchy slogan to those that don’t want to pay attention to human-caused issues in nature, such as climate change, but bees (and their role as roaming pollinators) are very important to our lives too. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 75% of crops that produce fruits or seeds that we use for food depend on pollinators. Pollinators affect 35% of global agricultural land.

    (via CNN, featured image: Pixabay on Pexels)

    Here are some other bits of news out there:

    • Another week goes by, and tens of thousands of books are ‘under review’ because people are straight-up bigots that want to control other people’s kids. (via BookRiot)
    • Lewis Black looks at “Why Are Young People Acting Older?” (via The Daily Show on YouTube)
    • Marvel’s Avengers will make our favorite ex-Hydra agent available for free in-game at the end of the month. (via IGN)
    • Media Matter for America reporter documents all the extremely right-wing nationalists and populists that Elon Musk welcomed back to the platform. (via Twitter)
    • Iranian artists dropped banners of Mahsa Amini at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art to bring attention back to the death and disappearances of Iranian women. (via Hyperallergic)

    And finally, Tee Noir is back with part two of her series focusing on hypersexuality and pussy perfectionism.

    What did you see online today, Mary Suevians?

    The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Alyssa Shotwell

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  • BREAKING NEWS: Bumble Bees Like to Play With Toys

    BREAKING NEWS: Bumble Bees Like to Play With Toys

    A bumble bee on a flower

    Bumble bees are some of the best animals in the animal kingdom. They’re roly poly little teddy bears that pollinate plants! What could possibly be better?

    Maybe bumble bees … that play with toys?

    A new study in Animal Behaviour has found that bumble bees do, in fact, like to play. Although we know that humans aren’t the only animals that engage in play behavior—see, for example, your dog racing joyfully after that stick—we usually think of play as something that’s reserved for vertebrates like mammals and birds. However, a research team led by PhD student Samadi Galpayage found that bumble bees appeared to enjoy rolling wooden balls around an enclosure, demonstrating that they’re much smarter than we give them credit for.

    According to the study, the bees played with the balls by standing on top of them and rolling them across the floor of the enclosure. The researchers controlled for other possible ball-rolling motivations and concluded that the bees’ behavior met the criteria for play. The bees didn’t have to roll the balls to accomplish anything, and they didn’t get any additional rewards for doing it. They seemed to just like it.

    Science reached out to Galpayage, saying that “the finding indicates a level of cognitive sophistication in bees that [Galpayage] hopes will encourage policies to protect them.” New conservation policies for bees can’t come soon enough, considering that bees are in serious need of protection: according to the Bee Conservancy, 1 in 4 species of bee in North America alone is at risk for extinction, even though bees pollinate the majority of the crops we depend on for food.

    So, the next time you see a bumble bee, remember that it’s not just a helpful pollinator. That bee is a playful scamp who deserves your love—and your support.

    (featured image: Thijs van der Weide via Pexels.com)

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    Julia Glassman

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  • Woman charged with sending bee swarm on deputies at eviction

    Woman charged with sending bee swarm on deputies at eviction

    SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — A Massachusetts woman who released a swarm of bees on sheriff’s deputies as they tried to serve an eviction notice is facing multiple assault and battery charges, authorities said.

    Rorie S. Woods, 55, pleaded not guilty at her arraignment on Oct. 12 in Springfield District Court and was released without bail, Masslive.com, citing court records, reported on Wednesday.

    She and other protesters maintain that they were trying to prevent a wrongful eviction. The homeowner, Alton King, brought evidence of a bankruptcy stay to court the next day, at which point “everything should have stopped,” said Grace Ross of the Massachusetts Alliance Against Predatory Lending.

    Woods’ lawyer did not immediately respond to a voicemail left by The Associated Press on Wednesday.

    Hampden County deputies were met by protesters when they went to the home in Longmeadow on the morning of Oct. 12, according to the official department report.

    Woods, who lives in Hadley, arrived in an SUV towing a trailer carrying bee hives and started “shaking” them, breaking the cover off one and causing hundreds of bees to swarm out and initially sting one deputy, according to the report.

    Woods, who put on a beekeeper’s suit to protect herself, was eventually handcuffed but not before several more sheriff’s department employees were stung, including three who are allergic to bees, the report said.

    When Woods was told that several officers were allergic, she said “Oh, you’re allergic? Good,” according to the report.

    Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi said Woods could have faced more serious charges if anything worse had happened. “We had one staff member go the hospital, and, luckily, he was all right,” Cocchi said.

    The deputies were simply doing their duty, Chief Deputy Sheriff Robert Hoffman said.

    “We had a court order that’s been presented to us and it’s our job to effectuate that court order,” Hoffman said. “It was Miss Woods’ arrival with her vehicle and her trailer that really caused things to go haywire.”

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