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Your backyard hive isn’t really helping save bees, research suggests

A honeybee lands on a blooming fiddleneck in the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in California, the United States. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

Allyson Chiu

THE WASHINGTON POST – If you think backyard and rooftop beehives are helping save the bees, think again, experts said.

A growing body of research suggests that the explosion of urban beekeeping involving honeybees in many cities and towns may be hurting critical local wild bee populations.

A recent peer-reviewed study conducted in Montreal, Canada found that places with the largest increase in domesticated honeybees also had the fewest wild bee species – with small bees, which are only able to fly shorter distances to find food, appearing to be especially at risk.

“The honeybee has been promoted as the symbol of helping the environment and biodiversity, and really it’s not that,” said former postdoctoral researcher at Concordia University in Montreal and the study’s lead author Gail MacInnis.

“You would never start keeping chickens to help save wild bird species.”

There are, however, benefits to urban beekeeping – as long as it’s done in moderation and hives are managed responsibly, experts said. Here’s what you need to know about keeping bees and what you can do if you want to help pollinators.

A honeybee lands on a blooming fiddleneck in the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in California, the United States. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

‘VERY SUCCESSFUL INVADERS’

Although honeybees are among the most common insects in the world, they aren’t native to many of the places where they are found, said associate professor and conservation scientist at York University who studies pollinators Sheila Colla. The western or European honeybee, the species commonly found in the United States, is native to Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

“Honeybees are very successful invaders,” Colla said.

Not only can these bees fly long distances but they are also able to effectively communicate with one another through a body-jiggling dance language about where nectar is. Introducing honeybee hives to an area can be a problem for local wild bees, which often end up competing for the same food sources. A single honey bee colony can be home to tens of thousands of bees.

“For people who say they want to save the bees and they have a honeybee hive, it’s kind of like throwing Asian carp into the Great Lakes and saying you want to save the native fish,” Colla said. “But obviously, they’re just taking the same resources that the native fish are.”

Hives that aren’t responsibly managed could also be sources of parasites or diseases that may quickly spread to wild bees, Colla said.

HOW TO SAVE THE BEES

First, it’s important to know that honeybees aren’t really in need of saving, said MacInnis, now a research scientist at Canada’s National Bee Diagnostic Centre in Beaverlodge, Alberta.

“Though honeybees have their own stressors, they are not actually in decline on a global scale.”

Wild pollinators, on the other hand, are declining on a global scale and do need help.

President of the DC Beekeepers Alliance, a nonprofit association, Jan Day said her group frequently gets asked the same question: “What can I do to save the bees?

“We assure them the managed honeybee is doing just fine,” Day said. She instead urged people to focus on planting native plants and to encourage others to do so as well.

Experts recommend planting a variety of native flowering species that bloom at different times during the year wherever possible.

Consider choosing some flowers that bloom early or late in the season, which is typically when food resources are scarce for bees, MacInnis said.

Mowing less and cultivating pollinator-friendly lawns and gardens could also be helpful, experts said. Native wild bees “do so much work and they’re so underappreciated”, Colla said. “Especially with climate change, if we want to have resilient ecosystems, resilient cities, we need to have as many species of bees as possible in our cities.”

RESPONSIBLE BEEKEEPING

But experts said doing away with all urban beekeeping isn’t the answer.

“We’re not saying ban urban beekeeping,” MacInnis said.

“There is room for it in cities. It’s just right now we’re not managing it very responsibly” in certain places.

Cities and towns that allow beekeeping should have caps on hive density and require people to register their bee colonies, experts said. In DC, for instance, residents have to register and are largely limited to four hives on a single property, said Day, who lives on Capitol Hill and has kept bees for more than a decade.

Beekeepers also need to understand the responsibility they’re taking on, Colla said. Backyard bees should be treated like other domestic pets, she said.

“You’re watching your bees,” she said. “You’re taking care of them. You’re treating them if they have illnesses. You’re feeding them if they look like they’re short on food.”

Major starfish outbreak detected in Lahad Datu, Sabah

A diver carrying a bucketful of crown-of-thorns starfish. PHOTO: REEF CHECK MALAYSIA

THE STAR – A concerted clean-up is underway in Darvel Bay, off Sabah’s east coast in Lahad Datu district, after a major outbreak of crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS) was detected.

Marine conservationists and government agencies are hard at work containing hundreds of those coral predators, which are threatening to destroy the coral reefs in the area.

Reef Check Malaysia (RCM), which partnered with the Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Ministry, has mobilised a team to eradicate the outbreak before it is too late.

The outbreak response team also includes divers from Sabah Parks, Lahad Datu Fisheries Department, Darvel Bay Diving Group and the NGO Larapan Youth.

RCM programme manager Nadhirah Mohd Rifai, a member of the outbreak response team, shared her experience handling COTS outbreaks over the years in Sabah.

A diver carrying a bucketful of crown-of-thorns starfish. PHOTO: REEF CHECK MALAYSIA

“Although COTS is a natural predator of corals, major outbreaks such as the one happening now can cause major harm to the coral reefs,” she said yesterday.

“One COTS can consume an average of 13square metres of reef per year. Imagine the potential damage that could be inflicted by thousands of COTS,” she added.

The team collected 485 COTS at Pulau Balik on Thursday and will spend the following three days controlling the population of the invasive starfish species in Darvel Bay.

If the COTS had been feeding for months unattended, Nadhirah said, most of the corals would have been dead.

“We need to take immediate action to reduce the population of the COTS before they wreak any further irreversible damage,” she said.

She said COTS outbreaks could be influenced by changes in the marine environment such as reduced water quality and increased water temperature.

UK drug crime boss in jail after fleeing to Thailand

LONDON (AFP) – A British drugs kingpin has been extradited home from Thailand to serve a lengthy jail term after spending years on the run, United Kingdom (UK) police said yesterday.

Richard Wakeling, 55, fled Britain in 2018 after he attempted with Dutch accomplices to smuggle GBP8 million (USD10 million) of liquid amphetamine from Belgium into the UK in 2016.

He was sentenced in absentia to 11 years and placed on the “most wanted” watch list of the British National Crime Agency (NCA).

He had been living in the Thai seaside resort town of Hua Hin for years with a fake Irish passport, according to Thailand’s police force, which arrested him in Bangkok in February.

He was escorted back to London by specialist UK extradition officers on Thursday and immediately jailed after a brief court appearance, according to the NCA.

Sweltering heat in Vietnam’s north sparks power cuts

HANOI (AFP) – Hanoi residents flocked to the Vietnamese capital’s air-conditioned shopping malls yesterday to escape power cuts at home, as the grid struggled to cope with the high demand caused by soaring heat.

Vietnam is one of many countries across South and Southeast Asia experiencing record-high temperatures in recent weeks.

As the temperature rose to 36 degrees Celsius, Bui Manh Duc Tai and his napping girlfriend were among those at the Aeon shopping mall trying to escape the blistering heat.

“Our home was without power since this morning. We came here for some cool air,” Tai told AFP. In another corner, student Nguyen Minh Thu sat on the floor trying to finish an assignment on her laptop.

“I had to come here for power so I could study,” the agriculture student said, adding the electricity at her home had been on and off all morning.

Scientists have warned that global warming is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events around the world, including heat waves.

Drought and heatwaves have put a lot of pressure on power supplies in the country’s north, according to Vietnam Electricity.

People rest inside a shopping mall in Hanoi, Vietnam. PHOTO: AFP

NASA’s Mars helicopter is somehow still flying – and playing hide-and-seek

Ingenuity on Mars, as photographed by the Perseverance rover. PHOTO: NASA

Daniel Wu

THE WASHINGTON POST – For around a week in April, scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory searched anxiously for signs of life on Mars.

Lost somewhere in the undulating terrain of a Martian riverbed was Ingenuity, the pint-size, astonishingly sturdy helicopter that had just completed its 49th flight on the Red Planet. The team searched each day for a radio signal that could confirm the aircraft was okay.

On April 2, Ingenuity soared 52 feet up into the Martian sky – a record height for the drone – to take a suborbital photo of Mars’ landscape.

After landing, it disappeared. When scientists attempted to upload instructions for a subsequent flight, Ingenuity’s radio sign was gone.

Scientists eventually located Ingenuity after six days of searching as the helicopter’s companion on Mars, the Perseverance rover, crested a ridge and drove closer to where the helicopter had landed.

NASA engineer Travis Brown described the episode in a blog post last week, offering a dramatic look into the agency’s exploration of Mars, and the incredible resilience of the Ingenuity helicopter. Its hardiness continues to surprise NASA two years after scientists expected the tiny craft to break down.

The helicopter is flying again, Ingenuity team lead Teddy Tzanetos told The Washington Post, and its longevity has inspired the team to include helicopters modeled off it in a future Mars mission – a testament to how sturdy Ingenuity has proved itself to be.

Ingenuity on Mars, as photographed by the Perseverance rover. PHOTO: NASA

“It’s absolutely ridiculous,” Tzanetos said. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing.”

Ingenuity defied the odds the day it first lifted off from Martian soil. The four-pound aircraft stands about 19 inches tall and is little more than a box of avionics with four spindly legs on one end and two rotor blades and a solar panel on the other. But it performed the first powered flight by an aircraft on another planet – what NASA billed a “Wright brothers moment” – after arriving on Mars in April 2021.

Still, Ingenuity was never meant to be more than an USD80 million proof-of-concept. It hitched a ride to Mars with Perseverance, an SUV-size rover that would carry out NASA’s intended mission to study Martian soil.

Ingenuity, controlled via radio signals relayed from Perseverance, completed its five-flight mission – a simple series to prove that the helicopter’s design would work in the thin Martian atmosphere – in May 2021. Then, Tzanetos’s team received approval to keep flying.

“At that point, we’re on borrowed time,” Tzanetos said. “None of the mechanisms were designed to survive longer than that.”

Somehow, they did – for months and months, and dozens more flights. By May 2022, it seemed as if Ingenuity’s miraculous story would finally plummet down to (Martian) earth.

Winter was setting in, and NASA feared the lower temperatures would cause Ingenuity’s solar-charged batteries to fail, or even freeze overnight.

The helicopter entered a low-power state after its 28th flight in late April of that year, and scientists told The Post they weren’t sure if it would fly again.

Incredibly, Ingenuity’s delicate parts stood up to the Martian cold. But NASA still faced the challenge of reconnecting with the helicopter every time its components froze, Tzanetos said.

The Ingenuity team adjusted by using data on Martian sunrises to calculate when the helicopter would thaw out each morning and regain enough charge to power on.

The result? A game of hide-and-seek of sorts, where NASA sent Ingenuity on flights, then used its model to calculate when the helicopter would be back online to receive its next instructions. It was enough to get Ingenuity and her wily mission team through the Martian winter.

“We still need to play some of these games every once in a while, depending on how cold it is or windy it is overnight,” Tzanetos said. “But the team’s gotten very good at that.”

‘No English? No problem’, says Spain opposition leader

MADRID (AFP) – Opposition leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo, whom polls suggest could be Spain’s next prime minister, admitted on Thursday he didn’t speak English but brushed it off saying there were always “translators”.

“My problem is English… I have to start studying it,” he told Telecinco television in his first interview since his right-wing Popular Party (PP) scored a major victory in last Sunday’s local and regional elections.

“I already had an English teacher set up to start learning on Monday, but now it turns out I’ve been called to a general election. Well, no problem,” Feijoo said.

“International summits normally have translators and what’s most important is that I know what I want to say.”

On Monday morning, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez – whose ruling Socialists suffered a drubbing in last Sunday’s polls – caught the country off guard by calling snap elections on July 23.

Spain takes over the rotating presidency of the European Union on July 1.

During the regional election campaign, Feijoo went viral after he was caught on camera mispronouncing United States (US) rock legend Bruce Springsteen’s name, calling him “Bruce Sprinter” during a party rally.

Spain has had a long history of prime ministers who do not speak English.

One was the former PP prime minister Mariano Rajoy who, when asked a question in English by the BBC at a press conference in 2017, dismissed it with a wave.

“Hombre, no,” he retorted, or “Oh man, no”, despite years of private English classes dating back to 2009 when he was opposition leader.

Sanchez is Spain’s first prime minister to be fluent in English.

Wandering llama blocks traffic on busy British highway

UPI – A llama was caught on camera blocking traffic on a British highway before being ushered out of the roadway by National Highways personnel.

Sue Brewer, who was a passenger in a car travelling on the M55 highway in Lancashire, near Wesham, captured video of the llama wandering in the roadway about 9pm.

The animal’s presence brought traffic to a halt.

Lancashire Constabulary said police were called about the llama, but the animal had already been escorted off the road by National Highways workers by the time officers arrived.

Officials said they were investigating the llama’s origins and attempting to determine how it came to be wandering loose on the highway.

‘Stop sending weapons to the battlefield’

Ukrainian soldiers fire a self-propelled howitzer towards Russian positions near Bakhmut, the site of the heaviest battles, Donetsk region, Ukraine. PHOTOS: AP

BEIJING (AP) – China’s Ukraine envoy called on other governments to “stop sending weapons to the battlefield” and appealed for peace talks at a time when Washington and its European allies are ramping up supplies of missiles and tanks to Ukrainian forces.

Li Hui said on Friday Russian and Ukrainian officials were open to peace negotiations, but he gave no indication they were any closer to happening.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s government said it is neutral and wants to serve as a mediator.

Foreign analysts saw little chance of progress from Li’s visits to the countries because neither side is ready to stop fighting, but sending an envoy gave Beijing a opportunity to expand its global diplomatic role.

“China believes that if we really want to put an end to war, to save lives and realise peace, it is important for us to stop sending weapons to the battlefield, or else the tensions will only spiral up,” Li told reporters.

Xi’s decision to send an envoy was welcomed by the Ukrainian government.Beijing released a proposed peace plan in February, but Ukraine’s allies insisted Russian President Vladimir Putin must first withdraw his forces.

Ukrainian soldiers fire a self-propelled howitzer towards Russian positions near Bakhmut, the site of the heaviest battles, Donetsk region, Ukraine. PHOTOS: AP
China’s Ukraine envoy Li Hui

“China’s goal is promoting peace talks and a cessation of hostilities,” said Li, a former ambassador to Moscow. European governments promised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy missiles, tanks and drones when he visited Britain, France and Germany in mid-May.

Ukraine has received Patriot anti-missile systems from the United States (US), Germany and the Netherlands. The US, Spain, Germany and France have pledged a total of 300 tanks. Li repeated Beijing’s call for respect for the “territorial integrity of all countries”.

“China advocates for a balanced and just way to address security concerns,” Li said.

Li, who also visited Poland, France, Germany and the European Union headquarters, said Beijing was ready to send a second delegation to discuss a possible “political settlement”.

“Compared with some countries’ actions, clinging to Cold War mentality, ganging up with other countries, creating small circles for bloc confrontation and carrying out hegemonic bullying actions, these are completely different practices,” he said.

Li also called for steps to protect the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, adding to appeals by the International Atomic Energy Agency this week for both sides to commit to preventing any attack on the facility to avoid a “catastrophic incident”.

Fatal train crashes in India in recent decades

Rescuers work at the site of passenger trains accident, in Balasore district, in the eastern Indian state of Orissa. PHOTO: AP

NEW DELHI (AP) – The latest deadly train crash in India happened on Friday, when two passenger trains derailed – killing more than 200 people, injuring more than 900 and trapping hundreds of others inside more than a dozen damaged rail cars, officials said.

More than 12 million people ride 14,000 trains across India daily, travelling on 64,000 kilometres of track. Despite government efforts to improve rail safety, several hundred accidents happen annually on India’s railways. Most are blamed on human error or outdated signalling equipment.

Here’s a look at other deadly India train crashes in recent decades:

October 2018 – A train ran over a crowd watching fireworks during a religious festival in northern India, killing at least 60 people and injuring dozens more on the outskirts of Amritsar, a city in Punjab state.

November 2016 – At least 146 people were killed when a passenger train travelling between the cities of Indore and Patna slid off the tracks. More than 200 people were injured.

Rescuers work at the site of passenger trains accident, in Balasore district, in the eastern Indian state of Orissa. PHOTO: AP

July 2011 – A passenger train jumped tracks near Fatehpur in Uttar Pradesh state in northern India, killing 68 people and leaving 239 passengers injured.

May 2010 – A passenger train derailed and was hit by a cargo train, killing 145 people in West Bengal state. Authorities blamed sabotage by Maoist rebels for the crash.

October 2005 – A passenger train plunged into a rain-swollen river in southern India, killing at least 111 people. About 100 injured passengers were rescued from coaches that derailed after floods washed away tracks in the town of Veligonda in Andhra Pradesh state.

September 2002 – An express train travelling from Calcutta to New Delhi jumped its tracks and plunged into a river, killing at least 121 people. The accident happened south of the Bihar state capital of Patna.

August 1999 – Two trains collided head-on in the city of Gauhati, killing more than 285 people.

November 1998 – Two trains collided in the northern town of Khanna, killing 210 people.

The crash happened when a passenger train hit cars that had uncoupled from another train.

August 1995 – Two trains collided near New Delhi, killing 358 people. One of the trains had stopped after hitting a cow.

Oath Keepers convicted in Capitol riot get prison

Members of the Oath Keepers extremist group stand on the East Front of the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, in Washington. PHOTO: AP

WASHINGTON (AP) – Two Florida men who stormed the United States (US) Capitol with other members of the far-right Oath Keepers group were sentenced on Friday to three years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other charges – the latest in a historic string of sentences in the January 6, 2021, attack.

David Moerschel, 45, a neurophysiologist from Punta Gorda, and Joseph Hackett, a 52-year-old chiropractor from Sarasota, were convicted in January alongside other members of the antigovernment extremist group for their roles in what prosecutors described as a violent plot to stop the transfer power from former President Donald Trump to President Joe Biden after the 2020 election.

Both men were among the lower-level members charged with seditious conspiracy.

Moerschel was sentenced to three years in prison and Hackett got three and a half years.

All told, nine people associated with the Oath Keepers have been tried for seditious conspiracy and six were convicted of the rarely used Civil War-era charge in two separate trials, including the group’s founder Stewart Rhodes.

Members of the Oath Keepers extremist group stand on the East Front of the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, in Washington. PHOTO: AP

Rhodes was sentenced last week to 18 years in prison – a record for a January 6 defendant.

Three defendants were cleared of the sedition charge but found guilty of other January 6 crimes.

Moerschel and Hackett helped amass guns and ammunition to stash in a Virginia hotel for a so-called “quick reaction force” that could be quickly shuttled to Washington, prosecutors said.

The weapons were never deployed. Moerschel provided an AR-15 and a Glock semi-automatic handgun and Hackett helped transport weapons, prosecutors said.

On January 6, both men dressed in paramilitary gear and marched into the Capitol with fellow Oath Keepers in a military-style line formation, charging documents stated.

“The security of our country and the safety of democracy should not hinge on the impulses of madmen,” Justice Department prosecutor Troy Edwards said.