Bees, biodiversity and COVID-19 - World Bee Day
Spring
sees nature’s most industrious creatures hard at work. From March on, they buzz
away, foraging on wildflowers and literally vibrating the pollen off plants. In
so doing, bees support countless ecosystems, bolster biodiversity, anchor food
chains and help ensure humans’ agricultural security. Not bad for insects no
bigger than a paperclip.
Equally
crucial is the role beekeepers and commercial pollinators play in food
production around the world. With bees threatened by disappearing habitats,
climate change, pesticides, deadly pathogens and invasive species, nature often
needs a helping hand. That’s where beekeepers come in and supply swarms that
can pollinate commercial quantities of crops.
The
picturesque Himalayan state of Uttarakhand in northern India is home to a
vibrant bee industry. It boasts of nearly 7,000 beekeepers tending to 70,800
colonies, producing over 15,000 quintals of honey each season. Some estimates
say Uttarakhand
exports nearly INR 80 crore (US$ 10.5 million) of organic honey every
year. Beekeeping is an important source of supplementary income for many rural
families.
March to
May, before the onset of summers that seem to get hotter every year, see the
hills come alive with flowers in bloom and the hum of bees. Usually, beekeepers
import queens and other bees across state lines each spring to replenish their
colonies, which decline over winter. They also help swarms relocate from
existing colonies, finding new homes, new plants and new crops to pollinate.
This
year, with spring came the COVID-19 pandemic. Along with that came the measures
to slow its spread – which disrupted the delicate interplay between farmers,
bees and beekeepers. Just when humans went inside, bees came out from their
winter hibernation. “We couldn’t migrate boxes of bee colonies from
neighbouring Uttar Pradesh because of the lockdown measures. For example, five
beekeepers from Almora were stuck 200 km away in Bareilly, which is in Uttar
Pradesh, when the lockdown was imposed,” said Sanjay Saxena, manager,
agriculture/ horticulture, Integrated Livelihood Support Project (ILSP)
programme management unit (ILSP is supported by IFAD). “That meant we lost
colonies of new age bees, so expansion of colonies was affected. It also
directly affected honey production and crop pollination. Regular beekeeping
activities that kept the supply of bees going were curtailed,” he added.
Santoshi
Devi, a beekeeper in Daula village, Rudraprayag district, spends around 2.5
hours every day tending to her nine beehives. “I lost four or five colonies
when the lockdown was imposed,” she said. “That was a hit of INR 8,000 (US$
105).” Ganga Devi, who keeps eight hives in Manpur village, Uttarkashi
district, said she had found it difficult to tend to her hives as frequently as
she normally would. “The technical experts also couldn’t to move around with
the quarantine and social distancing measures, so we didn’t have those inputs,”
she said.
Apple and
litchi crops, which start flowering from March and go on to May, were also
threatened. These crops rely on bees for pollination, and farmers usually rely
on beekeepers to truck in boxes of colonies to plantations and orchards. This
year, beekeepers managed to meet only half the demand, supplying 1,100 boxes.
This is likely to affect the production, in terms of quantity and quality, of
both fruits.
The
already short window of opportunity to pollinate crops was narrowing. That’s
when the staff from the ILSP team – ably supported by the livelihood
collectives and beekeeping communities – swung into action. “The ILSP team was
able to get permits for technical experts to move around, as well as for us to
manage daily activities,” said Ganga Devi.
“We spoke
to the beekeepers and coordinated with local and state officials, as well as
IFAD staff, to address these problems,” said Subodh Badoni, assistant manager,
agriculture/horticulture, ILSP. “We were therefore able to support beekeepers
every step of the way, as we had been doing as part of our project – from
providing technical inputs in rearing bees, extracting honey, and connecting
producers to markets.”
The
Government of India, once it was made aware of the problems caused by the
restrictions, quickly announced revised guidelines allowing transport of bee
boxes. The Uttarakhand government then moved to
issue a limited number of passes for beekeepers, which allowed them to
move around during the lockdown. The state, through the district horticulture
officer and sub-divisional magistrate, also connected beekeepers with honey
buyers.
There is
one silver lining to the COVID-19 emergency. Across the world, as nations went
into lockdown, bees and other pollinators are flourishing in the wild, as some
of the harmful practices that led to dwindling populations have reduced during
the crisis. But as people return to the outside world, any long-term benefits
for bees would depend on these changes being carried forward – and the
recognition that bees are essential workers for our food security.
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