The great honey droughtWinter viruses and the wettest August for years have combined to leave Britain's beehives dryIn
26 years of beekeeping, Ged Marshall has never seen anything as bad as
the 2008 honey harvest. A miserable summer that has confined his bees
to their hives following a winter bedevilled by deadly viruses means
that production this year will be barely a third of its usual level of
around five tonnes of honey.
Unfortunately for the nation's
honey lovers and apiarists, Mr Marshall's experience is far from
unique. According to the British Beekeepers' Association (BBKA), up to
a third of Britain's 240,000 hives failed to survive last winter and
spring due to disease and poor weather. The result is a drop of more
than 50 per cent in honey production across the country.
Rowse,
the UK's biggest honey supplier, warned yesterday that the harvest has
been so poor that major supermarkets will run out of stocks of English
honey before Christmas. A global shortfall in production from Argentina
to Australia has also driven up raw honey prices by 60 per cent in the
last 12 months.
Mr Marshall, 53, who keeps more than 500 hives
around the country from his base in Buckinghamshire, said: "Everyone is
crying out for English honey but there is just very little of it
around. Around now we are expecting to harvest heather honey but
keepers are opening their hives and finding them virtually empty. The
reasons are complex and very much include the impact of disease but the
weather has been crucial this year.
"If you are a commercial
beekeeper, being an optimist is a prerequisite but people are beginning
to wonder how bad it is going to get. In a bad year, I would expect to
lose about 10 per cent of my hives over winter. This year it was 30 per
cent. I have a friend who has been through two dreadful years with
disease and falling production levels, and he has said if next year is
the same he will simply have to pack it in."
The dearth of honey
this summer is due to a number of issues linked to changing climate and
trends in agriculture which belie the bucolic image of beekeepers in
protective masks harvesting dripping honey combs from their village
gardens.
A soggy August following on from a late spring confined
bees to their hives – honeybees do not forage in the rain – at a
crucial time for honey production. The decision by farmers to profit
from high wheat prices by increasing arable production has been at the
expense of crops such as borage, used in pharmaceutical manufacturing
and a prolific source of nectar for bees.
Along with a 75 per
cent drop in borage planting, there has also been a general reduction
in the amount of clover and meadowland available for bees. As a result,
honey yields at the key harvest times of April to May, mid-June to
mid-July and early September, which have been far below expected
levels. Britons consume around 30,000 tonnes of honey a year – a figure
that is rising by about 11 per cent a year – of which between 5,000 and
7,000 tonnes a year is domestically produced. This year the amount
produced in the UK is expected to be barely 2,000 tonnes.
The
problems have been exacerbated by similar difficulties elsewhere in the
world. Argentina, the world's largest honey producer, has a 20,000
tonnes honey shortfall due to drought and pasture being planted with
soya beans for biofuels while drought and hot weather in Australia and
eastern Europe has already drastically reduced production.
The
prospect of discerning consumers not having enough British honey to
pour over their muesli by the new year might not seem much of a
catastrophe.
But the poor harvest is symptomatic of a wider
malaise which beekeepers and researchers believe threatens the long
term prospects of not only the nation's bee colonies but the 25 per
cent of the UK's food production that relies on crops being pollinated
by bees.
The Government estimates that the nation's honey bee
hives – most of them cared for by 44,000 amateur beekeepers –
contribute around £165m to the economy by pollinating crops including
apples, pears, strawberries, blackberries, carrots, broccoli, onions
and oilseed rape. In short, much of British horticulture is reliant on
the health of the nation's bees.
The problem is that they are
struggling to overcome a far more intractable crisis than two miserable
summers in the form of a small mite called varroa that attaches itself
to honey bees and progressively makes them susceptible to lethal
viruses.
Francis Ratnieks, the UK's only professor of apiculture
based at Sussex University, said: "Historically, large-scale losses of
bee colonies are something that have happened periodically in Britain
and it is easy to forget that. But colony losses of 30 per cent are
worrying and it looks like it could be a signal that something is going
wrong."
A combination of varroa infestation and associated
viruses is suspected as being a key factor in Colony Collapse Disorder,
the mysterious phenomenon whereby hives are suddenly emptied of their
bees, which has claimed more than a third of the colonies in America
and spread to Canada, Italy, France and Germany.
The phenomenon
has yet to reach Britain but varroa has already taken a heavy toll on
domestic colonies. The leech-style mite had previously subsisted at a
low level on Asian honey bees but spread rapidly worldwide in the 1990s
after crossing over to European and American species, which have lower
resistance. To add to the problem, varroa has developed its own
resistance to Apistan, the pesticide previously used to control its
numbers.
John Howat, secretary of the Bee Farmers' Association,
which represents the UK's 300 commercial beekeepers, who perform
services such as pollinating fruit orchards, said: "Varroa and the loss
of habitat has already all but destroyed our wild bee populations and
now it is badly affecting our managed bees. The mite progressively
weakens the honey bee and makes it more difficult for hives to get
through the winter.
"Historically, we would expect a lost of
about four per cent of hives each winter and spring but this has risen
over the last three or four years. We are now at about 15 per cent this
year and the losses for hobbyists are much higher. Wet weather means
the bees stay longer in the hive which in turn means the varroa and
viruses are able to spread more effectively. Our members are very
concerned because we don't yet have a clear answer as to how to deal
with it."
The Independent understands that such is the level of
growing desperation to stop varroa losses among some commercial
producers that they are using a treatment, Apivar, which is banned in
Britain but legal in countries including America and New Zealand.
The
BBKA, which represents amateur beekeepers, said it had recorded a loss
of up to a third of hives among its members which could cost the
British economy £50m in lost pollination and subsequently lower yields
from food production. The result is a growing clamour for increased
government spending to research the causes of the dramatic decline in
the bee population and honey yields and develop a varroa-resistant
honey bee.
The BBKA has called for the Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) to increase its funding to
£8m over the next five years. Defra said last night that it is giving
£90,000 this year to investigate the high levels of colony loss and is
developing a ten-year programme to improve bee health.
Other disastrous harvestsWheatOne
of the best harvests in years in Britain has been ruined by weeks of
heavy rain that has soaked crops and prevented farmers from operating
combine harvesters. The National Farmers' Union estimates that up to
half the crop still remains in fields.
DamsonsOrchard owners
in Cumbria, Kent, Shropshire and Worcestershire have reported a
disastrous season with a knock-on effect for damson jam producers.
Price rises of 300 per cent have been predicted.
PearsBritain's
pear crop will be 38 per cent lower this year after late spring frosts,
and the European yield of 2.2 million tonnes will be the lowest in a
decade.
GrapesFrench wine producers have predicted a five
per cent drop in wine production to 43.6 million hectolitres due to the
poor weather. Experts blamed a cold snap in late March and early April
that damaged vines, unseasonably high rainfall and unexpected
hailstorms in the traditionally warmer months.
(By Cahal Milmo,
The Independent, 10/09/2008)