• usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.ml
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    edit-2
    15 days ago

    Yep for those curious how it harms native bees:

    But scientists say competition with honey bees may also play a role. In a 2017 report in Conservation Letters, researchers calculated that during three months, honey bees in a typical 40-hive apiary collect the equivalent amount of pollen and nectar as 4 million solitary wild bees. “Brilliant foragers,” honey bees can “dominate floral resources and suppress native bee numbers,” says lead author Jim Cane, a retired federal biologist who heads the nonprofit WildBeecology.

    Honey bees also carry diseases that can infect natives, including deformed wing virus and the parasite Crithidia bombi. Researchers have found that native bees near apiaries can suffer a high incidence of such illnesses.

    Also some fun facts: most North American native bee species don't even live in hives or produce honey for themselves at all. They also almost never sting too

    Unlike honey bees, more than 90 percent of our nearly 4,000 native bee species live not with other bees in hives but alone in nests carved into soil, wood or hollow plant stems. Often mistaken for flies, the majority are tiny and do not have queens or produce honey. Without a hive’s larvae and food supplies to defend, “native bees almost never sting,” Mizejewski say

    https://www.nwf.org/Home/Magazines/National-Wildlife/2021/June-July/Gardening/Honey-Bees

  • GreatAlbatross@feddit.uk
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    14 days ago

    I was planning to keep bees, until someone informed me that honey bees outcompete native bumbles.

    And I fucking love bumbles.

    So now I'm modifying the garden to be bumble friendly, and living without enormous amounts of honey.