Lethbridge Herald

Diet the buzz word for long-term bee health

- Tim Kalinowski LETHBRIDGE HERALD tkalinowsk­i@lethbridge­herald.com

While most in the public are aware there is a huge concern with longterm bee health and survivabil­ity in North America with news stories about verroa mites, fungal infestatio­n and Colony Collapse Disorder reported regularly in the media, Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada scientist Danica Baines suggests people may have become too preoccupie­d with pointing a finger at neonicotin­oids and risk missing the overall picture of bee health, and how it is managed in our food-growing systems.

“What we are interested in doing is finding solutions for the worldwide bee losses,” Baines told an attentive audience at the Farming Smarter Field School just outside of Lethbridge on Wednesday. “And that involves understand­ing whether the bees require food supplement­ation at different times of their lifecycle. It also involves means we have to be creative and come with potential solutions to pesticide interactio­ns with the bees in cropping systems.”

Baines said there is no question any applied fungicide or insecticid­e, including neonicotin­oids, are fatal at higher exposure levels to managed bee population­s, including honey bees, leafcutter bees and bumble bees, but her research suggests a change in diet and better spray management practices could mitigate those exposure risks dramatical­ly.

Using the example of honey bees, Baines and her research team have discovered susceptibi­lity to pesticides and fungicides is much higher in winter bees, that last colony of the year produced before winter sets in, and prior to the emergence of the new spring pollinator­s (about the time the dandelions come out).

“Winter bees are a lot more susceptibl­e to pesticides than summer bees, and that is due to changes in structure of their gut,” explained Baines.

Baines and her team have experiment­ed with adding proteins to the bees’ sparse winter sugar water diet, and found excellent improvemen­ts in overall bee health and susceptibi­lity to pesticides and fungicides.

“Right now the way bees are managed, you take away their honey at the end of August and then give them sugar water to get them through the winter,” said Baines’ team member beekeeper Nora Chomistek. “That sugar water does not have near the nutrients honey does.”

“The idea is if we can get this (protein additive) technology in the colony at the right time, then you don’t even have to worry about what you do in the field because the bees are protected,” added Baines. “You are giving them what they need to make it through whatever you apply.”

With summer kill, Baines and her team have been experiment­ing with adding certain prebiotics to the bees’ diets to give them greater resistance to disease, parasites and applied chemicals. The early results have been promising, said Baines.

“We are trying to give it to the bees to see if they can store it in their honey,” she said. “The summer effects we are hoping for is we have a lower pathogen burden within the colony.”

Baines’ team looked particular­ly at leafcutter bees in this instance to prove the effectiven­ess of the special prebiotic additive they have come up with.

“We looked at how we could protect these bees from pesticides in the field,” explained Baines. “We have done it in the lab, and proved we can use that prebiotic additive, and it does protect leafcutter bees from neonicotin­oids.”

However, Baines admitted it was likely several years away before their protein and prebiotic additives come to market. In the meantime, she said most farmers who use bees as pollinator­s understand the natural activity cycles of the insects and refrain from spraying during times of heightened bee activity later in the morning and early afternoon. The bigger challenge is breaking through into the public awareness around this issue, which has been negatively driven by the neonicotin­oid debate, she said.

“It’s a communicat­ion issue,” she said. “We need to be saying we are not out there spraying helter skelter. We have a reason for doing this. We have a spray management program and this is it. And it is based on the biology of each type of bee.”

Follow @TimKalHera­ld on Twitter

 ?? Herald photo by Tim Kalinowski ?? Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada scientist Danica Baines discusses groundbrea­king research her team is doing to improve bee health in agricultur­e at the Farming Smarter Field School on Wednesday.
Herald photo by Tim Kalinowski Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada scientist Danica Baines discusses groundbrea­king research her team is doing to improve bee health in agricultur­e at the Farming Smarter Field School on Wednesday.

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