Buzz off honey industry, our national parks shouldn’t be milked for money

Buzz off honey industry, our national parks shouldn’t be milked for money

The teddybear bee is a native ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlogn species. Image by from

Among the of native species damaged by the recent bushfire crisis, we must not forget native pollinators. These animals, mainly insects such as , help sustain ecosystems by pollinating native plants.

Native pollinator populations have been decimated in burned areas. They will only recover if they can recolonise from unburned areas as vegetation regenerates.

Since the fires, ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s beekeeping industry has been pushing for access to and other unburned public land. This would give introduced pollinators such as the European , (Apis mellifera) access to floral resources.

But our native pollinators badly need these resources – and the recovery of our landscapes depends on them. While we acknowledge the losses sustained by the honey industry, authorities should not jeopardise our native species to protect commercial interests.

The commercial honeybee industry wants access to national parks. Flickr

The bush: a hive of activity

The European honeybee is the main commercial bee species in ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog. It exists in two contexts: in hives managed for honey production, and as a pest exploiting almost every wild habitat. Honeybees in managed hives are classified as livestock, the same way pigs and goats are.

Feral and (to a lesser extent) managed honeybees contribute a broad variety of crop pollination services, including for , apple and lucerne (also called alfalfa) crops.


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Pollinators visit the flowers of the crop plants and ensure they are fertilised to produce fruit and seed. Beekeepers are often paid to put their bees in orchards since trees (such as almond trees) cannot produce a crop without insect pollination.

But native species of bees, beetles, flies and birds are for crops. They are also essential for pollination, seed production and the regulation of ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s unique ecosystems – which evolved without honeybees.

Nature at risk

The honeybee industry sustained considerable losses in the recent fires, particularly in New South Wales and on South ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s . Commercial hives were destroyed and floral resources were burned, reducing the availability of sites for commercial hives. This has prompted calls from beekeepers to place hives in national parks.

Currently, beekeepers’ access to conservation areas is limited. This is because bees from commercial hives, and feral bees from previous escapes, damage native ecosystems. They compete with native species for nectar and pollen, and pollinate certain plant species over others.

In NSW, honeybees are listed as a to biodiversity.

Untold damage

Allowing commercial hives in our national parks compromises these valuable places for conservation and could do untold damage.

×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s native birds, mammals and other insects rely on the same nectar from flowers as honeybees, which are abundant and voracious competitors for this sugary food.

Also, honeybees pollinate , such as , and . These are adapted to recover and spread after fire, and are very expensive to control.

Many native plant species are not pollinated, or are pollinated inefficiently, by . This means a concentration of honeybee hives in a conservation area could shift the entire makeup of native vegetation, damaging the ecosystem.

Bringing managed hives into national parks would also risk transferring damaging to native bee species.

Gorse (Ulex europaeus) is considered an invasive weed. ,

Chokehold on our flora and fauna

Currently, the commercially important honeybee is kept mainly on agricultural land. In national parks and reserves, native species are prioritised.

The amount of land set aside for conservation is already to preserve the species and systems we value.


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×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s national parks also suffer from mismanagement of by native and introduced animals, and other permitted in parks, such as road development and in some cases, mining.

National parks must be allowed to recover from bushfire damage. Where they are unburned, they must be protected so native plants and animals can recover and recolonise burned areas.

National parks decimated by the bushfires should be allowed to recover. AAP/Daniel Mariuz

Protecting nature and the beekeeping industry

The demand for commercial beekeeping in national parks is a result of native vegetation being cleared for agriculture in many parts of ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog.

In the short term, one solution is for beekeepers to artificially their hives with sugar syrup, as is common practise in winter. Thus, they could continue to produce honey and provide commercial pollination services.

While production levels may fall as a result of the reduced feed, and honey may become more expensive, at least consumers would know the product was made without damaging native wildlife and vegetation.

A long-term solution is to increase the area of native vegetation for both biodiversity and commercial beekeeping, by stepping up ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog’s re-vegetation programs.


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Unfortunately, vegetation clearance rates in ×îÐÂÌÇÐÄVlog remain .

Protecting and enhancing native vegetation would have both commercial and public benefits. Programs like the recently announced could be designed, to pay farmers for vegetation protection and revegetation.

Increasing vegetation in our landscapes is an insurance policy that will not only protect biodiversity, but support the honey industry. The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

, Associate Professor, ; , PhD Candidate, , and , Associate research scientist,

Tagged in The Conversation, biodiversity, insect pollination, Environment, sustainability and climate change