Disease, weather kill Vancouver Island bees - Action News
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British Columbia

Disease, weather kill Vancouver Island bees

Vancouver Island beekeepers say 90 per cent of their hives have been wiped out by a lethal combination of disease and a long summer last year, threatening the future of dozens of producers.

Vancouver Island beekeepers say 90 per cent of their hives have been wiped out by a lethal combination of disease and a long summer last year.

Vancouver Island is home toa quarter of all the honeybees in British Columbia, but commercial operations were devastated over the winter by a high mortality rate for honeybees.

Scientists believe the mass die-off was caused by several factors, including the varroa mite, which makes bees susceptible to other viruses.A long summer also meant bees continued collecting pollen for a much longer time, which weakened them and make them more vulnerable over the winter.

The resulthas beena disaster for Vancouver Island producers, but it won't affect the price of honey, according to Paul van Westendorp, the provincial apiculturist at the B.C. Ministry of Agriculture and Lands.

'What is important is crop pollination no bees, no berries.' Paul van Westendorp,provincial apiculturist

Theisland isn't a large honey-producing region. Instead, most island bees are sold to other producers in more agriculturally intensive regions to build up their hives quickly during the honey-producing season.

But van Westendorp is concerned about the same trendshowing up in the rest of the province, where honeybees play a critical role in agricultural pollination.

"In an agricultural context, what is important is crop pollination no bees, no berries."

However,early anecdotal reports from beekeepers in the Interiorare reassuring, van Westendorf says. Most say they aren't seeing massive die-offs but won't know for sure until April, when the bees become more active.

In the meantime, someisland beekeepers say they will import new bees from New Zealand and other areas butthey warn the cost many drive many of them out of business.

Pesticides designed to protect honeybees against the varroa mitehave been losing their effectiveness, say agricultural researchers, leading to heavy colony losses across Canada in recent years.