National Pollinator Week: Is America doing enough for its bees?
Loading...
The first day of summer kicked off National Pollinator Week, which runs June 20 to 26. from the Office of the Secretary of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) calls for this week to celebrate bees, birds, bats, butterflies, and other pollinators.
But the week isn't just a celebration. Activists are taking the opportunity to stage a protest to demand more action to protect the pollinators.
Advocates plan to bring 2.64 million dead bees to Washington, D.C., on Wednesday as part of a rally calling for immediate action by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the USDA, and Congress to protect the bees from toxic pesticides, according to from the environmental group Friends of the Earth.
"The millions of dead bees that have accompanied us during the Keep the Hives Alive Tour are carrying a message 鈥 this is just a tiny fraction of the devastation beekeepers are dealing with year after year. It鈥檚 well past time for policymakers to wake up and take action to curb the use of the toxic pesticides that are harming pollinators, people and our environment," Larissa Walker, Center for Food Safety pollinator program director, said in .
Much of the activists' ire is directed at pesticide regulation, or lack thereof.聽
The EPA released the results of its first scientific risk assessment about a class of pesticides called neonicotinoids and their effect on bees. Recent scientific studies have suggested that the pesticides, which work on insects' central nervous systems, cause problems for honeybees. The EPA found that whether or not the tested pesticides harmed the bees depended on the crop they were sucking nectar out of. Some posed serious risks while other were not harmful.
President Obama ordered the EPA to assess the effect of pesticides, particularly noting neonicotinoids, on pollinators in on the health of honeybees and other pollinators issued in June 2014.
The EPA has proposed restrictions to limit bee exposure to and has required on some neonicotinoid pesticide products specifically prohibiting use during certain times when bees are present, like when they are foraging, according to the agency's website.
From April 2015 to April 2016, beekeepers of their honeybee colonies, according to an annual nationwide survey conducted by the Bee Informed Partnership, a collaboration of US universities and research labs supported by the USDA. And that marks the second consecutive 12-month period that honeybee populations have dropped by over 40 percent.
About one third of the food eaten in the US either directly or indirectly benefits from honeybee pollination, according . And that means at least $15 billion of value is added to agriculture nationwide each year, thanks to the busy bees.
"This week and every week we should be doing everything we can to protect bees and other pollinators that are critical to our health and the health of our food system and environment," Ms. Walker said.