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The film's first stop is California, which produces as much as 90 percent of the world's almonds. The trees require the ministrations of untold numbers of bees, whose hives are trucked to the ...
This is what the world would look like without bees. An annual survey of 4,700 beekeepers found that since 2010, they've lost an average of 37.8% of US bee colonies each year. Last year was worse.
Whole Foods recently imagined what our grocery store would like in a world without bees by removing more than half of the market's produce. Here, we also take a purely hypothetical look at how the ...
It would mean a lot more than fewer stings and breakfast options. Maddie Moate reveals just how much we depend on bees, and how close we are to losing them. Where would we be without bees?
“We really can't live in a world without bees," Shufran said. "Our economy is built on pollination from native and non-native pollinators. … It's our food supply, and our food supply is very ...
If we want bees, we need to make space for them. – Dr. David Heaf, The Bee-friendly Beekeeper A world without bees would be void of flowers and food. In fact, it would be void of all living things.
Without bees and other pollinators, our food sources and biodiversity would dwindle, causing world hunger and a collapse of both the agricultural industry and local farmers. Wild bee populations ...