1 00:00:00,102 --> 00:00:03,534 Human society is extremely complex and fragile, 2 00:00:03,534 --> 00:00:05,352 built upon various pillars. 3 00:00:05,612 --> 00:00:07,275 One of them is the honey bee. 4 00:00:07,635 --> 00:00:12,089 One out of three meals eaten by humans is made possible by honey bees. 5 00:00:12,289 --> 00:00:15,971 They are so important that if all the honey bees were to die out, 6 00:00:15,971 --> 00:00:17,904 thousands of plants would follow, 7 00:00:17,904 --> 00:00:21,339 which could lead to millions of people starving in the following years. 8 00:00:21,549 --> 00:00:24,836 On top of that, honey bees have a huge economic impact. 9 00:00:24,956 --> 00:00:27,694 The dollar value of plants pollinated by them each year 10 00:00:27,694 --> 00:00:30,259 is around $265 billion. 11 00:00:30,459 --> 00:00:33,483 Food we take for granted would just stop existing without them, 12 00:00:33,483 --> 00:00:36,075 or there would be a massive decrease in productivity. 13 00:00:36,455 --> 00:00:40,649 Food including apples, onions, pumpkins, and also plants used for feeding livestock 14 00:00:40,649 --> 00:00:43,338 and thus extremely important for our milk and meat. 15 00:00:43,648 --> 00:00:45,782 Einstein is often quoted as having said, 16 00:00:45,782 --> 00:00:49,757 “If honey bees die out, humans will follow a few years later.” 17 00:00:50,027 --> 00:00:51,785 Actually, he probably didn’t say that, 18 00:00:51,785 --> 00:00:54,042 but there might be some truth in the statement. 19 00:00:54,372 --> 00:00:57,903 It’s unsettling, but honey bees have started to disappear. 20 00:00:58,043 --> 00:01:00,880 Millions of hives have died in the last few years. 21 00:01:01,050 --> 00:01:07,202 Beekeepers all over the world have seen an annual loss of 30–90% of their colonies. 22 00:01:07,202 --> 00:01:10,350 In the US alone, bees are steadily declining. 23 00:01:10,560 --> 00:01:14,679 From 5 million hives in 1988 to 2.5 million today. 24 00:01:14,999 --> 00:01:19,240 Since 2006, a phenomenon called “colony collapse disorder” 25 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:21,637 has affected honey bees in many countries. 26 00:01:21,887 --> 00:01:24,391 And we’re not entirely sure what’s causing it. 27 00:01:24,681 --> 00:01:27,305 All we know is that it’s pretty serious. 28 00:01:34,115 --> 00:01:38,476 Over the last few decades bees have seen an invasion of very dangerous foes. 29 00:01:38,839 --> 00:01:42,676 Parasites straight out of a horror movie, like Acarapis woodi, 30 00:01:42,676 --> 00:01:47,974 microscopic mites that infect the tracheae (that’s the breathing tubes) of bees. 31 00:01:48,264 --> 00:01:51,741 Here, they lay their eggs and feed from the fluids of their victims, 32 00:01:51,741 --> 00:01:56,125 weakening them considerably and spending their whole life inside the bees. 33 00:01:56,305 --> 00:02:00,448 Or Varroa destructor, a fitting name because they can only reproduce 34 00:02:00,448 --> 00:02:03,890 in honey bee hives and are one of the bees’ greatest enemies. 35 00:02:04,060 --> 00:02:08,630 The female mite enters a honey bee brood cell and lays eggs on the bee larva 36 00:02:08,630 --> 00:02:10,442 before it’s about to pupate and 37 00:02:10,442 --> 00:02:13,276 before the hive bees cover the cell with a wax capping. 38 00:02:13,516 --> 00:02:17,666 The eggs hatch and the young mites and their mother feed on the developing bee 39 00:02:17,666 --> 00:02:19,400 in the safety of the capped cell. 40 00:02:19,730 --> 00:02:22,740 The bee is not normally killed at this stage, just weakened, 41 00:02:22,740 --> 00:02:25,933 so it still has enough strength to chew its way through the wax capping 42 00:02:25,933 --> 00:02:27,663 and release itself from the cell. 43 00:02:27,973 --> 00:02:31,805 As it does, it releases the mother mite and her new offspring from the cell, 44 00:02:31,805 --> 00:02:34,073 and these are free to spread across the hive, 45 00:02:34,073 --> 00:02:37,792 starting the process over again in a cycle of about 10 days. 46 00:02:38,152 --> 00:02:41,417 Their numbers grow exponentially, and after a few months, 47 00:02:41,417 --> 00:02:44,187 this can lead to the collapse of the entire bee hive. 48 00:02:44,547 --> 00:02:48,875 Once outside of the cell, adult mites also suck the bodily fludis of bees 49 00:02:48,875 --> 00:02:50,755 and weaken them considerably. 50 00:02:51,045 --> 00:02:55,256 To make things worse, they also transmit viruses that harm the bees even more 51 00:02:55,256 --> 00:02:58,161 and can lead to birth defects like useless wings. 52 00:02:58,551 --> 00:03:02,314 But there are other threats too, such as viruses and fungi. 53 00:03:02,764 --> 00:03:06,102 Under normal circumstances, these phenomena should be manageable 54 00:03:06,102 --> 00:03:08,020 and are not enough to explain 55 00:03:08,020 --> 00:03:10,762 the horrendous amount of dying going on in bees. 56 00:03:11,077 --> 00:03:14,392 Over recent years new insecticides have been introduced 57 00:03:14,392 --> 00:03:15,716 that are deadly to bees. 58 00:03:16,056 --> 00:03:19,655 Neonicotinoids, a chemical family similar to nicotine, 59 00:03:19,655 --> 00:03:24,129 was approved in the early 1990s as an alternative to chemicals like DDT. 60 00:03:24,549 --> 00:03:27,169 They attack insects by harming their nervous systems. 61 00:03:27,509 --> 00:03:31,227 Today, they are the most widely used insecticides in the world. 62 00:03:31,477 --> 00:03:35,428 Globally, they saw sales of €1.5 billion in 2008, 63 00:03:35,428 --> 00:03:39,281 representing 24% of the global market for insecticides. 64 00:03:39,471 --> 00:03:46,085 In 2013, neonicotinoids were used in the US on about 95% of corn and canola crops, 65 00:03:46,085 --> 00:03:48,996 and also on the vast majority of fruit and vegetables, 66 00:03:48,996 --> 00:03:55,740 like apples, cherries, peaches, oranges, berries, leafy greens, tomatoes, potatoes, 67 00:03:55,740 --> 00:03:59,937 cereal grains, rice, nuts, grapes, and many more. 68 00:04:00,387 --> 00:04:02,295 Bees come into contact with the toxin 69 00:04:02,295 --> 00:04:05,191 while collecting pollen or via contaminated water, 70 00:04:05,191 --> 00:04:07,281 often bringing material into the hive, 71 00:04:07,281 --> 00:04:10,497 where it can accumulate and slowly kill the whole colony. 72 00:04:10,717 --> 00:04:14,507 The toxins harm bees in a variety of horrible ways. 73 00:04:14,767 --> 00:04:19,105 In high enough doses, it quickly leads to convulsions, paralysis, and death. 74 00:04:19,425 --> 00:04:21,455 But even in small doses, it can be fatal. 75 00:04:21,655 --> 00:04:24,690 It may lead to bees forgetting how to navigate the world, 76 00:04:24,690 --> 00:04:29,805 so bees fly into the wild, get lost, and die alone, separated from their hives. 77 00:04:30,205 --> 00:04:34,572 If this happens often enough, a hive can lose its ability to sustain itself. 78 00:04:34,832 --> 00:04:37,839 We know that neonicotinoids are harmful to bees 79 00:04:37,839 --> 00:04:40,118 and that we urgently need an alternative to it, 80 00:04:40,118 --> 00:04:44,056 but there are billions of dollars to be made in delaying this. 81 00:04:44,456 --> 00:04:47,743 Studies sponsored by the chemical industry magically appear to prove 82 00:04:47,743 --> 00:04:52,728 a much lower toxicity to bees, compared to those produced by independent scientists. 83 00:04:53,048 --> 00:04:56,397 There are even more factors contributing to the demise of bees, 84 00:04:56,397 --> 00:04:59,422 like too much genetic uniformity, crop monocultures, 85 00:04:59,422 --> 00:05:03,485 poor nutrition due to overcrowding, stress because of human activities, 86 00:05:03,485 --> 00:05:04,967 and other pesticides. 87 00:05:04,967 --> 00:05:08,335 Each of those factors on its own is a major problem for bees, 88 00:05:08,335 --> 00:05:12,527 but together, they probably account for colony collapse disorder. 89 00:05:12,797 --> 00:05:15,308 With parasites upping their game in recent decades, 90 00:05:15,308 --> 00:05:18,084 the honey bees are now fighting for survival. 91 00:05:18,414 --> 00:05:21,142 It would be a catastrophe if they lost this fight. 92 00:05:21,522 --> 00:05:25,618 This is a conundrum we have to solve if we want to continue living 93 00:05:25,618 --> 00:05:28,527 with a relative abundance and diversity of food. 94 00:05:28,957 --> 00:05:33,400 Humanity is deeply interconnected with Earth and the other lifeforms on it, 95 00:05:33,400 --> 00:05:35,581 even if we pretend that we’re not. 96 00:05:35,821 --> 00:05:37,882 We have to take better care of our surroundings, 97 00:05:37,882 --> 00:05:42,388 if not to preserve the beauty of nature, then at least to ensure our own survival. 98 00:05:43,698 --> 00:05:47,044 This video is supported by the Australian Academy of Science, 99 00:05:47,044 --> 00:05:50,131 which promotes and supports excellence in science. 100 00:05:50,331 --> 00:05:52,771 See more at . 101 00:05:53,161 --> 00:05:55,834 It 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