'Rewilding:' One California man's mission to save honey bees
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[October 24, 2019]
By Jane Ross
SEBASTOPOL, Calif. (Reuters) - The
staggering decline of honey bee colonies has alarmed experts across the
United States, but an unconventional apiculturist in California thinks
he has found a way to save them.
Michael Thiele has championed an approach he calls the "rewilding" of
honeybees, allowing them to live as they did for millions of years — in
natural log hives high above the ground.
"We can do this very, very simple thing — return bees into their natural
nest environment, into their natural biosphere," said German-born Thiele
at his home in Sebastopol, California. "If we lose them due to
human-induced mass extinction, will there be a tomorrow?"
Thiele's method consists of hollowing out logs and strapping them high
on tree trunks to mimic bees' hives before they were domesticated. He
also sometimes suspends them from barn rafters or perches them high on
wooden tables for a similar effect.
Honey bees are critical to the planet's ecosystem because they pollinate
plants that produce about a quarter of the food consumed by Americans,
according to U.S. government reports.
Last winter, U.S. beekeepers lost almost 40% of their colonies,
according to a report this year by the Bee Informed Partnership, a group
of industry participants.
It was the worst winter die-off in more than a decade.
Wild bee populations are declining too, but researchers found in 2015
that wild bees from around Ithaca, New York recovered from the
introduction of the deadly “varroa mite” in the 1990s while domesticated
bees did not.
Thiele also says domesticated bees are more vulnerable because they are
raised using smoke and chemicals and fed sugar water, which he claims is
bad for their health.
BARE-HANDED BEEKEEPER
Habitat loss, along with heavy pesticide use, climate change and
increasing urbanization are the main causes for declining bee
populations, experts say https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-bees/hundreds-of-north-american-bee-species-face-extinction-study-idUSKBN1685NG.
Thiele said his life with bees began with vivid dreams about them about
20 years ago when he was living in Big Sur in northern California. "And
they were so intense that, you know how it is after a very strong dream,
you wake up and it stays with you."
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Bee preservationist Michael J. Thiele, 54, holds a bee near a nest
habitat in Sebastopol, California, September 6, 2019. Thiele
estimates that he has "midwifed" billions of bees by building
traditional nest habitats that attract bees from within the local
watershed through swarming, which increases the bee population
exponentially. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
o he borrowed an empty box from a local beekeeper and soon it was
swarming with bees, drawn by the old smell of bees in the box.
Thiele over time rejected the "rectangular white boxes" of
traditional beekeeping and refused to use chemicals, smoke or
protective clothing when interacting with bees, scooping them up
from their hives bare-handed.
“It feels so intimate and I feel how deeply we belong and how
important it is to protect them,” he said as a swarm of bees crawled
over his hand and arm.
Once a hollowed-out log hive is attached to a tree, it becomes
attractive to bee "scouts" looking for a nest site, who then alert
their bee colonies to move into it.
He's been making the log hives since 2008 and says they are
sometimes colonized within days and usually within a few weeks.
Thiele does not consider himself a beekeeper in the conventional
sense. He created his Apis Arborea firm (Latin for bees in trees)
solely to rewild honeybees and said he does not farm the honey the
bees produce unless the colony leaves the hive or dies. His hives,
he said, are both a conservation project and a personal mission.
“It's almost as if honey bees make the fragility of life so
palpable," he said. "And as if they are really mirroring where we
are on this time on this planet."
(Reporting by Jane Ross; writing by Maria Caspani; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and Cynthia Osterman)
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