B.C. beekeepers suffering after grim year for colony die-offs - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. beekeepers suffering after grim year for colony die-offs

Beekeepers in the province are facing a tough season, as an especially bad year for wasps accounted for huge losses in some areas, while mites, viruses, and other issues which routinely take a toll over winter still haven't been accounted for.

Some beekeepers reporting massive losses due to wasp attacks, overall winter mortality still not known

Mike Munro cleans out the boxes that were killed by wasps last fall. In a couple of weeks, he'll get a shipment of new bees. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

It was late September when commercial beekeeper Mike Munro was checking on his hives in Delta, and giving the bees some food.

It was getting cool in the evenings, but the days were still warmandit was awhile before he would close up the hives for winter.

But what Munrodiscovered at his hives was a melee a bee massacre.Wasps had killed off a third of his hives.

"There was justwasps all over the place ...way more than I've ever seen before," he said. "I mean it's just it's horrible."

"Andit just seemed to be like that for every hive that I went to,"said Munro.

Munrois co-owner of apollinator company. Itmakes honey, but the main purpose of its300 hives is to rent them to local farmers to pollinatecrops, such asblueberries and cranberries, in order to produce fruit.

According to a 2016 report, bees contribute nearly half a billion dollars to the B.C. economy each year most of that in pollination services.

After the waspsfinished their attacks on Munro'sbees, at least 100 of the colonies each with about 50,000 bees had been wiped out. Hive after hive was littered with the severed body parts of honey bees and the carcasses of the wasps that died in the attack.

About 100 of Munro's hives were killed off, and in most of the boxes, he and his business partner, Steve Bayley, found a mass dead wasps and pieces of severed honey bee. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Across the province in Creston, after aproductive honey harvest in the summer, beekeeper Jeff Lee's experience was even more dramatic.

Of his 500 colonies, Lee saidby the end of October, 70 per cent had been wiped out. Again, yellow jacket wasps were largelyto blame, but some of the hive die-offs were more mysterious and samples have been sent to agricultural officials.

"My initial reaction was, were we bad beekeepers?Did we do something wrong?" said Lee. "You know this is our entire income."

Beekeepers have had different results around the province. According toKerry Clark, president of the B.C. Honey Producers Association, Lee and Munro'ssituations areon the extremeend of the spectrum, but wasps have been a major problem all over the place.

"I do think it's related to warm weather," said Clark,adding wasps numbers were high last spring and remained so until fall when they descended on the bees.

B.C.'s chief apiculturalist, Paul van Westendorp, acknowledged that wasps have been a problem this year, but he said in most areas, they won't cause nearly as many colony die-offs as mites and viruses.

Mike Munro, co-owner of Delta Honey Farms, says this is the first time in a few years that they've had to buy new bees. They can usually replenish their operation by themselves, but with pollination season coming right up, they need to buy about $20,000 worth of bees from Tasmania. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

"If I look at the province-wide situation, wasps are playing a big role, but [they're] not the principal cause for the death of a lot of colonies," said Westendorp.

Westendorp said the true scale of the winter's bee die-off won't be known until the weather gets warm enough for beekeepers to open their hives and report to the agriculture ministry.

The losses described by Leeand Munro don'ttake into account thehives that won't survive the winter. But their thoughts have already turned to the spring, and the commitments they've made to farmers who need crops pollinated.

Mike Munro's business partner, Steve Bayley, has built hundreds of so-called "robber screens" to install on their hives when wasp season picks up later this year. The screens let the bees for the colony go in and out, but makes it easier for them to protect the hives from attackers like wasps or other bees. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Each dead hive will have to be replaced with a "package" a box full of bees witha queen from the southern hemisphere. Munroisgetting hisfrom Tasmania, forabout $200 each.

For Lee, the loss has forced him to takeout a mortgage on his home.

"We'refacing a bill this spring of about $60,000," he said. "This one's way off the scale and from anemotional point of view from a personal financial point of view ... it really hurts."


Is there more to this story? Emailrafferty.baker@cbc.ca

Follow Rafferty Baker on Twitter: @raffertybaker