| Food,
Land or Bees
The global honeybee population reduced
drastically between 2005-2007. The varoa mite and the colony
collapse disorder were blamed. This led to fears of pollination
crisis-a notion that decrease in the number of pollinators
would threaten world food supply. Analysis of UNFAO data revealed
the global domesticated honeybee population has actually risen
45 per cent, driven by a demand for honey, over the last five
decades. While this bodes well for bee-pollinated crops, the
study published in the May 7 issue of Current Biology, also
noted that demand for insect-pollinated crops-mangoes, plums-tripled
over the last half century, indicating a supply under stress.
This could worsen as increasing demand for agricultural lands
might lead to destruction of habitats that support pollinators
and, in turn, cause the yield of insect-pollinated plants
to drop.
Source: Down To Earth
Date: June, 2009

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