- U.S. beekeepers report record honeybee deaths, with over 60% colony losses this winter — potentially the worst in history.
- Economic losses hit $139 million, honey prices rose 5%, and many beekeepers face financial ruin.
- Pesticides, especially neonicotinoids, are a major suspect, with studies showing multi-generational harm to bee reproduction.
- California’s almond industry, worth $11 billion, faced severe pollination shortages due to bee die-offs.
- Scientists warn of cascading agricultural impacts, including higher costs and lower yields for key crops.
(Natural News)—American beekeepers are sounding the alarm as honeybee deaths reach unprecedented levels, with commercial operations reporting an average loss of over 60% of their colonies this winter — potentially the worst die-off in U.S. history.
The economic fallout is staggering: losses are valued at $139 million, honey prices have surged 5%, and many beekeepers face financial ruin. Scientists are urgently investigating the causes, with pesticides emerging as a key suspect. A recent University of California, Davis study found that bees may need multiple generations to recover from just one pesticide application, raising concerns about long-term damage to these vital pollinators.
Beekeepers on the brink
The crisis became apparent during this year’s almond pollination season in California, where millions of hives are transported annually to support the state’s $11 billion almond industry. Beekeepers reported massive shortages, with some orchards left under-pollinated.
“Something real bad is going on this year,” said Scott McArt, an entomologist at Cornell University. “We’ve been seeing high losses year after year, but if anything, it’s getting worse, which is troubling.”
One anonymous beekeeper surveyed by Project Apis m., a nonprofit tracking colony health, described the financial devastation: “The equity on the house is gone, our retirement is gone, the family member’s money is gone. All that’s left are empty boxes. We don’t even have the dead bees. They are gone too.”
Pesticides: A lingering threat
While multiple factors — including parasitic varroa mites, viruses, and habitat loss—are under investigation, pesticides remain a critical concern. A 2021 UC Davis study revealed that bees exposed to neonicotinoids, a common class of insecticides, suffered a 44% drop in reproduction. Worse, the effects persisted across generations, with population growth rates plummeting by 72% after repeated exposure.
“One application in the first year and one in the second — that’s standard exposure,” said lead researcher Clara Stuligross. “Even then, we saw strong results that added up, each exposure reducing fertility.”
Neonicotinoids, which are chemically similar to nicotine, are widely used in U.S. agriculture and can linger in soil and plants long after application. Critics argue that regulatory agencies have underestimated their cumulative impact on pollinators.
Economic and agricultural fallout
Honeybees contribute an estimated $20 billion annually to U.S. agriculture by pollinating crops like apples, berries, and almonds. With colony numbers plummeting, farmers may soon face higher costs and lower yields.
“I don’t want to be a fear-monger, but this level of loss could mean increased bankruptcies among beekeepers,” warned Brandon Hopkins, a pollinator ecologist at Washington State University. “”Growers of crops downstream from almonds may need to scramble if the beekeeper they’ve relied on to pollinate their apple trees, for example, isn’t in business anymore.”
Despite the crisis, USDA research capacity has been hampered by staffing cuts, leaving universities like Cornell to fill the gap. Scientists are now analyzing bee samples to pinpoint the primary drivers of this year’s catastrophic losses.
The honeybee crisis underscores a broader challenge: modern agriculture’s reliance on chemicals that may harm the very pollinators it depends on. While habitat restoration and mite control offer partial solutions, the long-term effects of pesticides demand urgent attention.
For now, beekeepers are left to absorb unsustainable losses, but the long-term impact could be even more devastating. As McArt put it: “Without their crop pollination we wouldn’t be doing well at all.”
Sources for this article include:
Maybe it’s the crap they’re spraying in the shy.
Sky
Bees are dying again… Democrats must have lost an election BIG!!!
That’s the only time bees die, apparently…
It’s always “ follow the money “, who is promoting neonicotinoids pesticides? No long term studies?
You can follow the money, and that’ll give you hints…sometimes. But at the end of the day, it’s never actually about money, because the people we’re talking about own the printing presses that MAKE the money. So, there’s always a different reason than the 1 dimensional “money answer”.
25 year old story, recycled again.
we have the same level of die off, but no pesticides within 50 miles. it is about atmospheric pollution, increased solar uv, or something else that isnt pesticides. it worse than your article suggests. as for some universities that are going to do something, they never have before, in all recorded history, except shill for big AG companies that fund them.
as for USDA, another useless propaganda outfit, totally useless, and every grower knows it.
the insect die off is affecting almost all species not just bees, please apply some critical thinking.
What’s killing the bees? The article suggests pesticides, Wth the exlposion of organic farming, pesticide usage has most likely decreased. Could it really be the heavy metals being sprayed via chemtrails?
Pesticides and 5g. It’s a 1-2 punch. And most of their weapons are binary in nature, making root causes difficult to pin down. This is intentional and by design.
See fluoride in the water and aluminum in the deodorant for a prime example.
Bees use vibration frequency to levitate. There is mounting evidence that certain frequency pollutions may influence the bees ability to fly and affect all biology in general! Dig deep to research this suppressed research results.
Cloud seeding, pesticides, & chem trails are killing everything.