Noah Wilson-Rich: How you can help save the bees, one hive at a time
Noah Wilson-Rich studies bees and bee diseases. He founded Best Bees Company to support people who want to own and care for their own beehive. Full bio
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in the modern world.
with them dating back 8,000 years ago
in what is now modern-day Spain.
this indicator species is dying off.
of all beehives in the United States.
in areas with harsh winters,
half of our people last year?
the food-producing people?
replacing these dead beehives,
that we rely upon:
upon to eat, hay and alfalfa -- gone,
here in Cape Cod
in honeybee immunology.
in a good economy --
how to improve bee health.
on Cape Cod here in Provincetown
to get involved and to help.
got eight beehives at her home in Truro,
to her friend Valerie,
an abandoned tennis court on her property.
vaccines for bees.
started to take off.
what we were doing.
I was going to get an eviction notice,
the last thing we needed, right?
on a good day, though,
urban beekeeping laboratory,
Let's get a beehive in the back alley."
an eviction notice,
more honey that first year
in any beehive we had managed.
perspective forever.
"How do we save the dead and dying bees?"
to put maps together,
citizen science beehives
beehives at home decks,
these little data points,
"How can I get involved?"
of my friend Fred,
for tenant relations
and noticed on the honey jar
from the host company of that meeting.
and -- boom! --
on the rooftops of their skyscrapers
over a million dollars for bee research.
as little data points across the country,
for local beekeepers, 65 of them,
in their own communities,
together making a difference.
what's actually been saving bees,
what's been killing them.
pesticides, herbicides, fungicides;
where bees were thriving.
beehives produce more honey
than rural and suburban beehives,
these three killers of bees,
the Harvard School of Public Health.
from our citizen science beehives
in areas where bees are doing better.
is -- the orange bars are Boston,
would be the lowest,
levels of pesticides.
the most pesticides in cities.
for what's saving bees --
of my life as a scientist.
but the opposite is true.
finding, right?
all over our beehives.
to this one with North Carolina State is:
between disease in bees
bees are sick and dying.
of bees in cities.
The opposite was true.
are thriving have a better habitat --
and colleague Anne Madden,
kind of like AncestryDNA or 23andMe.
you find out, "I'm German!"
and we look at all the plant DNA,
here in Provincetown.
I'm able to report to you
in our own community.
is from privet.
and it's controversial,
which is water lily honey.
right here in the summer,
for the first time ever.
if you need to do any city planning:
that's good for your garden?
we now know this answer.
is deeper in the data.
and you want to explore your heritage,
85 different plant species
from India is oak,
in one taste of Indian honey.
116 plants in the spring
to test the habitat hypothesis.
and we get some interesting data.
in a sample of honey.
in suburban areas with lawns
but they're terrible for pollinators?
that's a wildflower meadow
the most habitat, best habitat,
over 200 different plants.
support for the habitat hypothesis.
how we can work with cities.
eight times better habitat
with governments, we can scale this.
on my tombstone, it'll say,
after all of this.
and city planners --
is mostly linden trees,
needs to be replaced, consider linden."
to governments, we can do amazing things.
on top of rooftops worldwide
and securing food systems.
from the country of Haiti.
students at Yale University and Ethiopia.
we can add value to their honey
and secure their food systems.
is when we think about natural disasters.
a baseline measure of any habitat
the environment pose to it?
Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria.
Hurricane Maria made landfall.
and in what quantity and where
that connected us, that primed us,
for pollinators that have deep roots,
or destroyed by a natural disaster,
but think about this:
that's also good for pollinators
what's saving bees --
are going to save us --
for environmental health,
sources of information,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Noah Wilson-Rich - BeekeeperNoah Wilson-Rich studies bees and bee diseases. He founded Best Bees Company to support people who want to own and care for their own beehive.
Why you should listen
Noah Wilson-Rich founded Best Bees Company in his Boston apartment while getting his Ph.D. at Tufts University. Best Bees supplies gardeners and any other interested parties in the Boston area with beehives, as well as the resources, materials and appropriate consultation for their upkeep. This service is a nontraditional means of raising money for research to improve honey bee health. Profits from installing and managing these honey beehives goes to fund Wilson-Rich's research into bee diseases.
Noah Wilson-Rich | Speaker | TED.com