The first national study to map U.S. wild bees suggests they're disappearing in many of the country's most important farmlands--including California's Central Valley, the Midwest's corn belt, and the Mississippi River valley. If losses of these crucial pollinators continue, the new nationwide
assessment1 indicates that farmers will face increasing costs--and that the problem may even destabilize the nation's crop production.
The findings were published December 21 in the
Proceedings2 of the National Academy of Sciences.
The research team, led by Insu Koh at the University of Vermont, estimates that wild bee abundance between 2008 and 2013 declined in 23% of the contiguous U.S. The study also shows that 39% of US croplands that depend on pollinators--from apple
orchards3 to
pumpkin4 patches--face a threatening mismatch between rising demand for
pollination5 and a falling supply of wild bees.
In June of 2014, the White House issued a presidential
memorandum7 warning that "over the past few decades, there has been a significant loss of pollinators, including honey bees, native bees, birds, bats, and butterflies." The
memo6 noted8 the multi-billion dollar contribution of pollinators to the US economy--and called for a national assessment of wild pollinators and their habitats.
"Until this study, we didn't have a national mapped picture about the status of wild bees and their impacts on pollination," says Koh, a researcher at UVM's Gund Institute for
Ecological9 Economics--even though each year more than $3 billion of the US agricultural economy depends on the pollination services of native pollinators like wild bees.
The report that followed the White House memo called for seven million acres of land to be protected as pollinator habitat over the next five years. "It's clear that pollinators are in trouble," says Taylor Ricketts, the senior author on the new study and director of UVM's Gund Institute. "But what's been less clear is where they are in the most trouble--and where their decline will have the most consequence for farms and food."
"Now we have a map of the hotspots," adds Koh. "It's the first
spatial10 portrait of pollinator status and impacts in the U.S.,"--and a tool that the researchers hope will help protect wild bees and
pinpoint11 habitat restoration efforts.