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Keeping bee colonies in cold storage may save them from climate change

A research team looked at the possibility of putting colonies into indoor cold storage.

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By Stephen Beech via SWNS

Keeping bee colonies in cold storage may save them from climate change, suggests new research.

The pollinators' famous work ethic might be the end of them amid global warming, say scientists.

They explained that flying shortens their lives - and worker honey bees will fly to find flowers whenever the weather is right, regardless of how much honey is already in the hive.

Using climate and bee population models, American researchers found that increasingly long autumns with good flying weather for bees raise the likelihood of colony collapse in the Spring.

The research team also looked at the possibility of putting colonies into indoor cold storage, so honey bees will cluster in their hive before too many workers wear out.

Study lead author Dr. Kirti Rajagopalan, of Washington State University (WSU), said: “This is a case where a small amount of warming, even in the near future, will make a big impact on honey bees.

“It’s not like this is something that can be expected 80 years from now. It is a more immediate impact that needs to be planned for.”

The research team ran simulations through a honey bee population dynamics model using climate projections for 2050 and the end of the century at 2100.

Washington State University researchers and students collect samples. (Brandon Hopkins / WSU via SWNS)

They found that honey bee colonies that spend the winter outside in many areas of the Pacific Northwest would likely experience Spring colony collapses in both the near- and long-term scenarios.

The same thing happened and also occurred under a simulation where climate change continued as it is progressing now and one where greenhouse gas emissions were reduced in the near future.

Worker honey bees will forage for food whenever temperatures rise above about 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 Celsius).

When it gets colder, they cluster in the hive, huddling with other bees, eating honey reserves and shivering, which helps keep the bees warm.

In the Spring, the adult worker bees start flying again. That means they also start dying. If too many older worker bees die before their replacements emerge ready to forage, the whole colony can collapse.

Scientists have estimated this happens when there are fewer than 5,000 to 9,000 adult bees in the hive.

The new study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, found that colonies wintering outside in colder areas such as Omak in the far north of Washington state might still do all right under climate change.

But for honey bee colonies in many other places, such as Richland, Washington near the border of Oregon, staying outside in the winter would mean the spring hive population would plummet to fewer than 9,000 adults by 2050 and less than 5,000 by the end of the century.

Washington State University researchers and students collect samples. (Brandon Hopkins / WSU via SWNS)

The researchers pointed out that the simulations just looked at seasonal factors such as temperature, wind and the amount of daylight, making them fairly conservative models.

Study co-author Dr. Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman, of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Carl Hayden Bee Research Centre, said: “Our simulations are showing that even if there is no nutritional stress, no pathogens, no pesticides – just the conditions in fall and winter are enough to compromise the age structure of a colony.

"So when the hive comes out of winter, the bees are dying faster than they're being born."

The research team also simulated potential mitigation, placing honey bee hive boxes in cold storage so the bees start to cluster earlier and save workers. For example, in the Richland scenarios, by the end of the century, having bees in cold storage from October to April would boost the spring hive population to more than 15,000 compared to around 5,000 to 8,000 if they were kept outside.

A relatively new practice, cold storage is gaining popularity among commercial beekeepers to help manage bee health and for the logistics involved in moving hives to California to pollinate almond trees in February, an event that draws more than two million hives from across the country.

Study co-author Professor Brandon Hopkins, a WSU entomologist, said: “A lot of beekeepers are already practicing this management technique of storing bees indoors because it has a lot of immediate potential to help in a number of ways."

He added: “These findings demonstrate that there are additional benefits to this practice for the survival of colonies in a changing climate.”

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