Saving Bees We’ll Save Ourselves
How important Bees are?
We could think that watermelon grows from a seed that comes from a seeds store, the same way we think babies come from Paris*, but the truth is that natural grow of watermelon in proper size, colour, symmetry, nutrients, seed production, etc., is based on a sufficient pollination level.
Immature Watermelon due to insufficient Pollination http://www.mybalconyjungle.com/watermelons.html
Let´s make it simple like if it were an easy process, supposing the watermelon plant is in good health and has already flowers (male and female flowers), with the right water-air-soil quality (do not forget that all those good conditions are possible because of nature; all the little and big members of nature, are doing its part of the job in maintaining the conditions that make life, and of course, our watermelon too, possible).
Pollination starts the production of seeds, if all went well, in a few days the female flower will change: it will start to get larger at a surprising rate as it turns into a watermelon. If the pollen is sufficient, the fruit will grow perfectly. That will give a healthy complete full of nutrients of energy crop, and more seeds for reproduction, and no problems of maturity or abortion of the fruit.
From the cheapest, quickest, and easiest, and obviously less controlled and artificial, we can find different methods for pollination: honeybees and bumble bees crosspollination, where different species of flowers are involved, self-pollination, hand pollination (no bees, only humans pollinating one by one the flowers); there is not a conclusion determining that the result (the fruit) is better with one or another method, although recent studies state that wild bees are the Champions in pollination.
Apparently, crops, will continue existing even without bees; There exists also a variety of watermelon who reproduces without pollination at all, using different hormones.
The major industries are already on that, trying to find solutions for the future of farming, inventing bee-robots to pollinate, genetic modified insects to protect crops, pharmaceutical remedies, but also spreading pesticides (even if right now we will not grow many safe crops without pesticides, some experts say), the relation between pesticides and bee population decline had been admitted, by the EU; and we are far away from eating again wild primitive fruits, as the Gurum, perhaps the African actual watermelon original plant; these companies and institutions are really interested in making studies and big research in how to solve the problem, having all kind of possible data. All to “save the bees”, it seems.
In 2016, the year of the importance of soil, with many researchers doing a great job on that, in order to solve food challenges for an increasing population and an exponential decrease of resources, are we really capable of understanding the magnitude of the problem? Are not global indicators, as FAO studies in countries like India, enough for warning about the importance of Bees? They are the support of the trophy chain.
So, there are several problems for the bees now: the big loose of habitats, contamination, pesticides, lower biodiversity, industrialization of bees and beehives, and invasive species, like the Varroa or even the Vespa Velutina, an Asiatic wasp that literally eats Bees, and have no real enemies in Europe and other countries.
As the importance of the Bees becomes more and more visible, we would like to go back to the 40´s 50´s 60´s when huge areas where full of flowers and happy bees, open grasslands that got turned into cereal fields and farmland.
From Hooney Booney, a research project, a new solution had been offered to control the Vespa Velutina invasion. It is a low-cost, Open Source, DIY solution to identify the wasp and eliminate it, in a clean way, because it doesn’t use toxics.
written by Maria Verde Muniesa.
Maria Verde Muniesa is a Biologist and a Natural Science Researcher
Research sources:
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/besa/29.4.50 50-51 First published online: 1 July 1983
FAO http://www.fao.org/3/a-i1929e/i1929e01.pdf
Value of Bee Pollination to U.S. Agriculture . M. D. Levin. – DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/besa/29.4.50 50-51 First published online: 1 July 1983
VALENCIA INSTITUTE OF RESEARCH IN AGRICULTURE
INTITUTO VALENCIANO DE INVESTIGACIONES AGRARIAS
http://ingenio-triana.blogspot.com.es/2015/10/todo-sobre-el-cultivo-de-la-sandia.html
- Evaluating Pollination Deficits in Pumpkin Production in New York © 2014 Entomological Society of America
List of crops pollinated: Insect Pollination Of Cultivated Crop Plants
by S.E. McGregor, USDA Originally published 1976 – D. Petersen, A. S. Huseth, B. A. Nault
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/EN14085 1247-1253 First published online: 1 October 2014
http://ee.oxfordjournals.org/content/43/5/1247.abstract
http://ee.oxfordjournals.org/content/43/5/1247.abstract
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/lasi/, http://www.beelab.umn.edu/
* new-born babies are brought from Paris by a stork ( at least in Spain ),
Resources:
http://honeybeelab.oregonstate.edu/
http://www.uvm.edu/~uvmpr/?Page=news&storyID=22053
http://news.uoguelph.ca/2016/03/bee-flower-choices-altered-by-exposure-to-pesticides-study/
http://www.uoguelph.ca/honeybee/