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Missouri Researchers Study The Declining Bee Populations By Listening To Their Buzzes

Bumblee queens visit flowers of the alpine skypilot. These large bees have a distinctive flightz buzz, the bee version of a cargo plane flying from flower to flower.
Courtesy Zoe Moffett
/
Colorado College
Bumblee queens visit flowers of the alpine skypilot. These large bees have a distinctive flightz buzz, the bee version of a cargo plane flying from flower to flower.

See a bee; hear a buzz.

That is what researchers studying the declining bee population are banking on. A new technique based on recording buzzing bees hopes to show farmers just how much pollinating the native bee population is doing in their fields.  

Vegetable and fruit growers depend on pollinators to do a lot of work in their greenhouses and fields. Pollinators, like bees, flutter about the blossoms on plants and orchard trees, transferring pollen from plant to plant and ensuring that those organisms have a chance at reproducing.

Indeed, three-quarters of global food crops depend on pollinators to some extent, according to the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Pollinators like bees are especially vital for fields of tomatoes, almonds and apples. In the U.S., pollinators are responsible for more than $24 billion dollars of economic activity, according to a 2014 Obama Administration report.

The problem: Pollinators are disappearing. Beekeepers surveyed last year, for example, lost one-third of their colonies. A mix of weather, disease, climate change and chemicals is often fingered as the culprit.

Without a reliable number of animal pollinators, farmers do not know how much pollination is actually going on in their greenhouses and fields.

“Native pollinators are the bees’ knees,” jokes Dan Kelly, owner of Blue Heron Orchard in Canton, Missouri. “Native pollinators are absolutely essential in agriculture – especially in fruits and vegetables. You can’t do it without them.”

Kelly used to borrow honeybee colonies from his friend every spring to help pollinate his certified organic apple trees. Four years ago, though, the bees he borrowed disappeared – likely due to competition with other species. He decided then that he couldn’t rely on honeybees and shifted his focus to attracting bees native to his Missouri habitat.

“The more diversity you have in the operation, the more beneficial insects you have working for you,” Kelly says. “Then that’s less that I have to do.”

Farmers like Kelly would love to know exactly how active bees are in his orchard. That can help him monitor pollination, let him know if he needs to step in and pollinate by hand and maybe even help him predict how much of a harvest to expect.

But native bees are wild. And even if they are buzzing around, are they actually doing their jobs?

Candi Galen, a biology professor at the University of Missouri, wanted to answer that exact question. She studies beneficial partnerships between species.

Candi Galen, a University of Missouri biology professor, has found a way to help farmers identify pollination activity by studying sound.
Credit Kristofor Husted / Harvest Public Media
/
Harvest Public Media
Candi Galen, a University of Missouri biology professor, has found a way to help farmers identify pollination activity by studying sound.

While honeybees often get the spotlight, they are generally managed by individual beekeepers and commercial operations. Galen wanted to look at native bees, like bumblebees, and see if there was a way to monitor their activity, a tough task for a small team or an individual farmer.

“We wanted to figure out short of cloning ourselves how we could be in many different places getting valuable data on bee populations, their abundances and the pollination they're providing for plants at the same time,” she says.

Bees, of course, produce that buzzing sound as their wings beat against the air. Galen and her team set up microphones in clover patches, which have a tasty flower for native bumblebees, in central Colorado. They wanted to listen in to the buzzing bumblebees make when they are flying from flower to flower.

“We were very aware of the flight buzzes and so we thought if we can hear them, we can record them,” Galen says. “And if we can record them, we can count them.”

Galen and her team recorded fields of clover for a week, then took the audio files and fed them through a computer. With a bit of number crunching, the team was able to determine the number of distinct bee’s buzzes.

Galen and her team were able to break down the buzzes to identify unique frequencies of individual insects. The buzzes could tell the researchers how large a bee is and even how long its tongue is. After that, it became a simple matter of counting.

Then, the more vexing question: Were the bees actually pollinating or just passing by?

“That's what a farmer would want to know if they weren’t working on alpine clover, but they were working on apples or blueberries,” Galen says. “How does my yield relate to this simple measurement of buzz density or activity?”

In the fall, she returned to Colorado to count the seeds in the clover plants to see how successful the bees were in pollination. Turns out, pretty good. She says the patches of clovers where her team counted more buzzes during the spring had more seeds in the fall. And those with fewer buzzes had fewer seeds.

While not a conclusive formula, it is good news for, say, a tomato farmer who has opened up her greenhouses to bees for pollination.

“If we have microphones there, we can tell her how she’s done and whether that’s how much time she needs to leave them open in order to get that great pollination service,” Galen says.

That is valuable information for farmers who are already strapped for resources, Galen says. Especially in light of a declining pollinator population. In fact, she is working on an app to help farmers start counting their own buzzes.

Copyright 2017 KCUR 89.3

Kristofor Husted is a senior reporter at KBIA in Columbia, Mo. Previously Husted reported for NPR’s Science Desk in Washington and Harvest Public Media. Husted was a 2013 fellow with the Institute for Journalism and Natural Resources and a 2015 fellow for the Institute for Journalism and Justice. He’s won regional and national Edward R. Murrow, PRNDI and Sigma Delta Chi awards. Husted also is an instructor at the Missouri School of Journalism. He received a B.S. in cell biology from UC Davis and an M.S. in journalism from Northwestern University.