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First large-scale study reveals important losses of managed honey bee and stingless bee colonies in Latin America

Authors :
Fabrice Requier
Malena Sibaja Leyton
Carolina L. Morales
Lucas A. Garibaldi
Agostina Giacobino
Martin Pablo Porrini
Juan Manuel Rosso-Londoño
Rodrigo A. Velarde
Andrea Aignasse
Patricia Aldea-Sánchez
Mariana Laura Allasino
Daniela Arredondo
Carina Audisio
Natalia Bulacio Cagnolo
Marina Basualdo
Belén Branchiccela
Rafael A. Calderón
Loreley Castelli
Dayson Castilhos
Francisca Contreras Escareño
Adriana Correa-Benítez
Fabiana Oliveira da Silva
Diego Silva Garnica
Grecia de Groot
Andres Delgado-Cañedo
Hermógenes Fernández-Marín
Breno M. Freitas
Alberto Galindo-Cardona
Nancy Garcia
Paula M. Garrido
Tugrul Giray
Lionel Segui Gonçalves
Lucas Landi
Daniel Malusá Gonçalves
Silvia Inés Martinez
Pablo Joaquín Moja
Ana Molineri
Pablo Fernando Müller
Enrique Nogueira
Adriana Pacini
María Alejandra Palacio
Guiomar Nates Parra
Alejandro Parra-H
Kátia Peres Gramacho
Eleazar Pérez Castro
Carmen Sílvia Soares Pires
Francisco J. Reynaldi
Anais Rodríguez Luis
Carmen Rossini
Milton Sánchez Armijos
Estela Santos
Alejandra Scannapieco
Yamandú Mendoza Spina
José María Tapia González
Andrés Marcelo Vargas Fernández
Blandina Felipe Viana
Lorena Vieli
Carlos Ariel Yadró García
Karina Antúnez
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Over the last quarter century, increasing honey bee colony losses motivated standardized large-scale surveys of managed honey bees (Apis mellifera), particularly in Europe and the United States. Here we present the first large-scale standardized survey of colony losses of managed honey bees and stingless bees across Latin America. Overall, 1736 beekeepers and 165 meliponiculturists participated in the 2-year survey (2016–2017 and 2017–2018). On average, 30.4% of honey bee colonies and 39.6% of stingless bee colonies were lost per year across the region. Summer losses were higher than winter losses in stingless bees (30.9% and 22.2%, respectively) but not in honey bees (18.8% and 20.6%, respectively). Colony loss increased with operation size during the summer in both honey bees and stingless bees and decreased with operation size during the winter in stingless bees. Furthermore, losses differed significantly between countries and across years for both beekeepers and meliponiculturists. Overall, winter losses of honey bee colonies in Latin America (20.6%) position this region between Europe (12.5%) and the United States (40.4%). These results highlight the magnitude of bee colony losses occurring in the region and suggest difficulties in maintaining overall colony health and economic survival for beekeepers and meliponiculturists.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.88a268b987b7410aa58aae87e6c66ca3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-59513-6