Earth has about 20,000 different species of bees, which are wonderful insects that have impacted Earth in many ways for at least 100 million years. The following few paragraphs will include information on what bees do to help the Earth, life in the hive, and their deaths. Paragraph one will include information on what bees do to help the Earth. Paragraph two will include information on how bees live their lives. Paragraph three will include information on death and extinction of bees. One species of bees out of the 20,000 is the Honeybee. The Honeybee pollinates at least 1/3 of our fruits and vegetables, depending on the crop. Some fruits aren't capable of developing without pollination from Honeybees. Some fruits can develop without the help …show more content…
Honeybees are social animals, they're called social animals because they live in colonies and rely on each other to live. There are many different species of bees in a colony which include a queen, drones, and working bees. The Queen is the only bee that's sexually developed. She's the largest bee, after she's selected by the worker bee she will go on a mating flight and the drone bees will fertilize her. The Queen's fertilization process can last her entire lifespan in some cases. She's most productive within the first two years of her lifespan. The Drones are the male bees in the hive and they only have one job- to mate with the queen. They don't collect food or pollen, they don't tend to the babies either. The Drones are kicked out of the hive lots of time during the winter because the resources are scare and they aren't too important. The working bees (example is the Honeybee) are the mightiest bees in the colony and they're all girls! In a colony there are normally 50,000-60,000 bees. In the beginning of their lifespan they are nurse bees and soon after that they graduate to field and scout bees. They do other jobs as well like protecting the hive and making comb. Sadly, they only live about a month or less, but in the winter they're capable or living longer than
“Bees need food (nectar, pollen) provided by insect-pollinated plants in order to reproduce and produce more bees” (Corbet, Williams, & Osborne, 1991, p 2). By creating hives and environments that are conducive to bee sustainment, it is possible that strides can be to reverse the downward trend in populations. This is critical as one study showed. It stated that the loss of bees was a domino effect to other species. It stated, “If bee pollinated flowers
Furthermore bees specifically are particularly efficient with it being estimated that they are the sole pollinators for 50% of the approximate 80% of flowering plants which rely on insects for pollination (Bradbear, 2009). Their efficiency is further illustrated by the fact that a single colony containing 25,000 forager bees is able to pollinate 250 million flowers per day (Bradbear, 2009). As a result of this it can be seen that bees are hugely important as pollinators with many species of flower being completely dependent on them. Furthermore, the importance of bees extends beyond ecological diversity; certain types of bees are hugely important economically. In addition to pollinating a large variety of fruit and vegetables, bees produce Honey; together this results in them having an estimated value of service of £200m a year in the UK (National Audit Office (NAO), 2009). Overall it can be seen that bees are of significant importance that any decrease in population should be treated with concern, as a result of this a large quantity of research has been conducted into identifying possible
Only 4 of these species are honeybees, and 250 species are bumblebees (IUCN, 2013) with up to 90% of the remaining species classified as solitary bees (Kindersley, 2016). Honeybees make honey, its their primary food, feeding up to 10,000 strong colonies (Benjamin, 2015). Bumblebees don’t make honey but they are important pollinators,their hairier coats can attract more pollen and they can fly at colder temperatures than honeybees most bumblebees are wild (Benjamin,2015),and are not often used commercially unlike honey bees.
Bees are important pollinators of many plants in the ecosystem (2). Recently, the decline in the number of bees in North America and Europe has shifted the research focus of many ecologists towards pesticide use (2). The impacts of pesticides on bees and other pollinators can have a major influence on honey production and biodiversity.
Abstract Bees are the backbone of agriculture and they are the main reason we have plants in our garden. It is no mystery where the term worker bee came from, because 90% of crops cannot grow without the pollination of bees (6). In addition to pollinating a vast amount of nature, they also make creations of their own, and produce a surplus of honey. The taxonomy for these organisms is classified as Apis mellifera.
According to National Public Radio (NPR) News a type of bees called the Bumble Bees were put on the endangered species list this year. Picture a house, with a bee hive near the door. Now think if the homeowners are allergic to bees. The homeowners would destroy the bees’ habitat to remove it. Even though bees can hurt people, there should be more regulations to protect the bees because of habitat loss and climate change that are drastically decreasing their numbers.
A honey bee colonies can have populations over 75,000. Bees don’t hibernate, they live off of the honey that they created and they won't freeze because all the worker bees are working so there’s enough heat. The average bee speed in only about 15 miles per hour. As many people know, bees are excellent pollinators. Using their short, hairy legs, bees are responsible for collecting and transporting more than 80 percent of the pollen needed by most fruits, legumes, and vegetable-seed
Bees are one of nature’s biggest celebrities. They have been on the cover of Time magazine, written about in The New York Times, and featured in multiple documentaries with various celebrities. And there is good reason for it. Bees are responsible for the pollination of the majority of foods, including almonds, blueberries, avocados, and watermelons, as well as the pollination of many flowering landscape plants. Bees are a keystone species, and we need to rehabilitate their populations or face a serious change in the composition of our landscape and meals…which is not something I take lightly. Take away blueberries and avocados and I would have an anxiety attack. But my work is about much more than just saving the bees. It’s about biological
In centuries, the honey bee has a very important role in our agriculture. According to Watanabe, Honey bee approximately benefits $10 billion of crops, including almonds, apples, and alfalfa every year in the United State (Pollination Worries rise As Honey Bees Decline, 1170). In addition, The National Agriculture Statistics Service (NASS) had estimated 2660 million honey producing colonies in 2015 (2017). Based on honey bees’ behavior, they can expand nearly all habitable corners of the globe which made them highly adaptable species (Dennis, 80). With adaptable capability and high productivity, our beekeepers can able to maintain their life
The second topic in our presentation is on the bee and its role in the ecosystem.
Since the mid 2000s, bees have mysteriously vanished and have not been returning to their honeybee hives and as years go by much of society has become unconscious to the situations occurring in our environment. Although, bees are small in size, they are big providers for sustaining our food system. The honeybee pollination is the key role in the development of food we humans grow and the overall relationship of bees is what helps us receive that food. Bees are clear indicators of showing how our environment is producing and by their extinction will
Bees are some of the most feared insects on the planet but aside from their sting they are quite a complex and beneficial creature. There are over 20,000 species of bees on the planet (Spivak,2013). They are often associated with honey however, they play a far more important role, they pollinate. Bees are responsible for about 80 percent of pollination worldwide and a single colony is able to pollinate upwards of 300 million flowers each day (Greenpeace.org). Although there are ways for human pollination it is often a painstaking and time-consuming process. Studies have also shown that human pollination is not as effective (Spivak, 2013)). With 90 percent of the worlds nutrition dependent upon bees we need to support the bees with pollination (Greenpeace.org). If we want to continue enjoying the many foods bees provide for us we
A bee is an insect that lives in every part of the world except the North and South Poles. Bees are one of the most useful of all insects. There are 20,000 species of bees in the world (154, B: Bees). Bees get their food from flowers through pollen and nectar. They collect tiny grains of pollen and nectar from flower blossoms. Sticky nectar gets attached to the tiny hairs that cover their bodies and is distributed when bees travel from flower collecting nectar (201, B: Bees). Bees make their honey from nectar and use both honey and pollen as food. When bees are collecting nectar for food, they spread pollen from flower to flower. The process of pollination allows plants to reproduce as well as feeds the bees. Bees have become completely dependent on flowers for food. Flowers, in turn, rely heavily on bees to
In October of last year, first time in the United States bees became known as endangered and appeared on the list of endangered species. How do they help with agriculture? Most of the questions are not answered on how they are becoming extinct if there were so many of them years ago, how did they become extinct? Most bees are harmless until you mess with them but that has nothing to do with how they are becoming extinct. In the paragraphs below I will be explaining how I think bees are important to our food supply, possible threats that harm their population, and the step that may help to protect bees.
Bees are vital to farmers and ranchers because they’re necessary to keep their crops reproducing.