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Nearly 10 percent of some 2,000 species of European wild bees
face extinction, says a recent study, adding that the drivers behind such a
mass disappearance of nature’s top pollinators include the use of insecticides,
fertilizers, and climate change.
RT.com reports:
“Overall, 9.2 percent of bees are
considered threatened in Europe, while at the EU-27 level, 9.1 percent are
threatened with extinction,” says a new report published as a part of
the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) European Red List of
Bees project.
The study, co-funded by the European Commission, gives
information about 1,965 wild bee species in Europe, including their status,
distribution and the dangers they face.
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The main threats to bee survival are connected with modern
agriculture, says the report, adding that these hazards include intensive
arable farming, livestock farming and the continued presence of commercial
timber plantations. Climate change may also contribute to mass bee extinction.
Bees “are threatened
with extinction in Europe mainly due to habitat loss as a result of agriculture
intensification (e.g., changes in agricultural practices including the use of
pesticides and fertilizers), urban development, increased frequency of fires
and climate change,” says the study.
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Also herbicides can also negatively affect bee diversity, as
they “can reduce the availability of flowers on which bees depend and delay the
flowering, so the timing between the period when food is most needed by
pollinators and food availability is disrupted.”
“Our quality of life – and our
future – depends on the many services that nature provides for free.
Pollination is one of these services, so it is very worrying to learn that some
of our top pollinators [bees] are at risk!” said Karmenu Vella,
European Commissioner for Environment, Maritime Affairs and Fisheries.
“If we don’t address the reasons
behind this decline in wild bees, and act urgently to stop it, we could pay a
very heavy price indeed,” he added.
Knowledge about wild bees in Europe is “incomplete,
as we are faced with an alarming lack of expertise and
resources,” says Jean-Christophe Vié,
deputy director of the IUCN Global Species Programme.
“Bees
play an essential role in the pollination of our crops. We must urgently invest
in further research in order to provide the best possible recommendations on
how to reverse their decline,” he
said.
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According to the report, every year bees provide
crop pollination worth €153 billion globally and €22 billion in Europe.
“In terms of global
agricultural production volumes, 35 percent comes from crops that depend on
pollinators, mainly insects. Out of the 124 main crops grown for global human
consumption, 87 (70 percent) require insect pollination for seed production.”
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