I'm glad to see this article addressed the issue of honey bees being invasive and inhibiting the native pollinators. What where the carpenter bee populations 400 years ago? Would they be capable of pollinating our current agricultural, with the help of other pollinators like the bumblebee? We will never have a real answer to these questions, but it makes sense that honey bee die off problem was really just propaganda motivated by profits.
I'm glad to see this article addressed the issue of honey bees being invasive and inhibiting the native pollinators. What where the carpenter bee populations 400 years ago? Would they be capable of pollinating our current agricultural, with the help of other pollinators like the bumblebee? We will never have a real answer to these questions, but it makes sense that honey bee die off problem was really just propaganda motivated by profits.
I'm glad to see this article addressed the issue of honey bees being invasive and inhibiting the native pollinators. What where the carpenter bee populations 400 years ago? Would they be capable of pollinating our current agricultural, with the help of other pollinators like the bumblebee? We will never have a real answer to these questions, but it makes sense that honey bee die off problem was really just propaganda motivated by profits.