Texarkana Gazette

Dramatic decline found in Western bumblebee numbers

- By Amy Joi O’Donoghue

SALT LAKE CITY — A federal review of existing data unveils an alarming trend for the western bumblebee population, which has seen its numbers dwindle by as much as 93% in the last two decades.

The find by the U.S. Geological Survey will help inform a species status assessment to begin this fall by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which may ultimately add the insect to its endangered species list.

Tabitha Graves, senior author of the study and a research ecologist with the survey, said the trend with the western bumblebee documented between 1998 and 2018 is troubling because of their important role as pollinator­s.

“They contribute a lot of money in terms of pollinatio­n services for our food crops,” she said. “Seventy to 80% of flowering plants and crops are pollinated by animals overall. Pollinatio­n contribute­s to $20 billion in agricultur­e in the United States.”

Bumblebees also pollinate plants in the wild, such as huckleberr­ies which are a staple food source for bears.

There are multiple factors at play that are contributi­ng to the demise of the bumblebee, including pesticides, habitat fragmentat­ion, a warming climate and pathogens, researcher­s say.

“People started to notice these declines in the 1990s. This bumblebee that was once very widespread and common is something that people started to see less frequently,” said Diana CoxFoster, research leader and location coordinato­r at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Pollinatin­g Insects Research Unit at Utah State University.

“There are localized population­s where it is still happy and healthy, but there have been declines in large parts of its previous distributi­ons. … Asking why these declines are happening is very important.”

There are concerns that other species of bumblebees used in commercial pollinatio­n are spreading pathogens to the western bumblebee, Cox-Foster added.

“The role of pests and pathogens is of particular concern,” she said. “There is also climate change and how that has affected the distributi­on of the bee. Agri-chemicals are also part of the stress issue.”

Graves said the research doesn’t point to one conclusive cause for the decline, which will be the focus of another research effort to better quantify particular threats.

“We have a sample design and have identified where we have gaps in knowledge,” Graves said. “There are a lot of places in western North America where we have not done sampling for bumblebees for a long time. We need to support this kind of monitoring and research.”

To that end, residents can get in on the action by downloadin­g an app at bumblebeew­atch.org and documentin­g what bumblebees they may come across. There have been an estimated 14,000 submission­s from all 49 states where bumblebees occur.

Cox-Foster also added that people can plant bee friendly vegetation to encourage their presence around homes.

“Planting for bumblebees, or all bees, is really important,” she said. “One of the major issues facing pollinator­s is lack of floral resources.”

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ A bumblebee flies near a lavender bush in the Internatio­nal Peace Gardens in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Tribune News Service ■ A bumblebee flies near a lavender bush in the Internatio­nal Peace Gardens in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States