We've been doing our greatest to save lots of the honeybees - however now there is a sting within the tail

I'm surrounded by towering glazed partitions, concrete pillars and galvanised girders, the intrusive throb of helicopters and rising wail of police sirens.

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It's morning on a City of London rooftop. But that rooftop itself is somewhat oasis: a tennis court-sized patch of meadow full with clover, buttercups and 5 beehives.

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But just one is buzzing.

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The remaining 4 are empty because the keeper, Dale Gibson of Bermondsey Street Bees, realised such numbers of honeybees have been doing extra hurt than good.

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"London is Europe's most densely populated city for honeybees, possibly the world," he mentioned.

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"We've been hijacked by the Save the Bees motto, which has been interpreted as meaning honeybees.

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"Well, guess what? The honeybee is in nice fettle.

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"The UN hive data for honeybees globally shows they're at an all-time high.

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"What we have to do is see the influence these honeybees, with their proliferation, particularly in locations like London, is having on different pollinators and particularly different wild bees."

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Why the excitement round honeybees has modified

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As immediately is World Bee Day, it is an opportunity to ask how we acquired right here when, just a few years ago, the buzz around bees was deafening - a theme of peril for honeybees that stretched from newspaper headlines to cultural norms, with Hollywood's animated Bee Movie and plot strains in Doctor Who.

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Professor Phil Stevenson works on the Kew Royal Botanical Gardens and has studied the bee craze.

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"It's probably because the narrative around saving bees came at the same time as issues around colony collapse disorder in the US, when whole hives died out," he mentioned.

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"The problem is the density of hives.

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"Our work urged about seven hives per sq. kilometre was about as a lot as London may tolerate.

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"In some locations in London there are more than 50 hives per square kilometre and in one particular location there are 400 hives in a square kilometre, and they all need feeding."

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The science could have moved on, however within the wider public, the love for honeybees is remarkably sticky.

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This could seem a random remark, however once I was speaking to a Sky News engineer whereas making this report, he confirmed me his telephone: the case coated by a Save the Bees sticker with a honeycomb motif.

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Hogging all of the pollination

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Pollination is the act of taking pollen between the female and male components of various flowers, permitting seeds to kind.

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It is crucial to the replica of our floral ecosystem, and far of our meals depends on it, too.

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But oil crops like rapeseed and soy, and fruits like strawberries and apples, are extremely depending on the labour of a complete vary of bugs - not simply bees.

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There are a whole lot of different pollinating bee species and a whole lot extra wasps, flies, beetles, butterflies and moths which all want pollen and nectar.

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Phil Stevenson has a favorite - the furry footed bee - and we additionally spot a chafer beetle with an excellent golden sheen having fun with a pollen binge.

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A wholesome ecosystem wants abundance and number of pollinator species.

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"There is absolutely concrete evidence you can see a halo around honeybee hives, not just in cities but also in wild landscapes, where you have a significant reduction in nectar and pollen and therefore a significant reduction in wild bees and solitary bees," he mentioned.

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Honeybees' sting within the tail

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So, this is not simply an city or London drawback.

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Dr Lucy Witter is an entomologist and farm wildlife advisor working with the Cheshire Wildlife Trust.

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"One of my biggest bugbears is people getting honeybees to help pollinators generally," she mentioned.

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"It's the equivalent of saying 'we need to save wild birds, so let's get some chickens'.

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"Honeybees are a domesticated species".

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Dr Witter is not anti-honeybees if there is a guaranteed abundance of food, but, in many cases, they reduce the food available to native wild pollinators.

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She also thinks their amazing PR detracts awareness from all those other critical pollinating insects - and as they are such efficient gatherers of pollen, they are worse at helping plants to reproduce.

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"Honeybees do not drop a lot pollen whereas solitary bees, just like the purple mason bee, are such messy eaters they find yourself coated in pollen and this falls off on different crops doing the pollination job," she added.

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So, as our well-intentioned ardour for honeybees has ended up with a sting within the tail, what ought to we do?

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Everyone now we have spoken to agrees: present habitat.

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Whether it is planting pollinator pleasant plots or simply letting flowering weeds flourish, give meals and shelter to bugs.

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Phil Stevenson mentioned: "What we really need to be doing is much more about the landscape itself, increasing the floral resources where wild bee species can nest and have refuge."

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