The University of Southampton

Honey, I can’t bee-lieve what I’m seeing!

Why does it keep getting hotter ... and where has my home gone?!
Why does it keep getting hotter … and where has my home gone?!

Enjoying that tangerine? That glass of cranberry juice this morning? Waking up in those 100% cotton bed sheets? Well, you can thank the bees. They are the major pollinators of plants and crops in ecosystems and are invaluable to us (Brown and Paxton, 2009; Costanza et al., 1997). Unfortunately, bees are declining, mainly through human causes (boo!). Habitat loss, fragmentation, invasive species and climate change are all factors that are harming the bee populations.

Homes under the hammer – no, not the TV show

The human population is set to reach ~9 billion by 2050 (United Nations, 2004), seeing an increase in resources to feed all these mouths. Habitats need to be converted into farmland to provide crops (which ironically will be pollinated by bees!). It is known that human disturbance can negatively impact bee numbers (Winfree et al., 2009). It could also cause populations to inbreed, meaning they are susceptible to nasty diseases causing death (Brown and Paxton, 2009). The more we harm bee habitats, we are causing detriment to their numbers and are also causing a negative effect on our lives – how counterproductive.

More food and less destruction! (pintrest.com)
More food and less destruction!

How did you get here?!

Sometimes you get an unfamiliar, ugly head pop up in a population which is causing harm to the original species that live there – otherwise known as an invasive species. The process is usually:

  • Introduction
  • Colonisation
  • Naturalisation
  • Spread
  • Impact

 

This can be seen in the Africanized honeybee in South America, largely replacing the European honeybee by outcompeting it (Schweiger et al., 2009).

Left: Africanized Honey bee - Right: European Honey Bee
Left: Africanized Honey bee – Right: European Honey Bee.

Nature has no air-conditioning: Get used to the warm!

Despite belief from certain world leaders, climate change is happening. Climate change brings many problems to bee populations, such as a change in the relationship between plants and the bees and an increase in disease and parasites (Le Conte and Navajas, 2008).

In snowy environments, climate change is causing snow to melt earlier, meaning flowers are emerging earlier, causing bees to be out of sync (phenology), thus causing changes in what’s called their ‘functional traits’ which are traits that typically relate to changes in the environment.

Bees must build up sufficient honey stores so that they can survive over the winter periods, however climate change is causing a change in flower development (and pollen production) whereby drought is responsible for the decline in flower numbers (La Conte and Navajas, 2008). This means that the bees cannot build the right amount of honey stores and starve over the winter period.

The future of the bees

There are conservation efforts to try and help bees (woo!) such as (Brown and Paxton, 2009):

  • Minimising habitat loss
  • Making agricultural habitats bee-friendly
  • Training scientists and the public

 

If bees were to go extinct tomorrow, we would have to self-pollinate EVERYTHING, as bees do all this hard work for us, for nothing. If we lose bees, we lose the planet, we must ensure bees do not leave us otherwise the future will look very bleak (with no hint of yellow and black).

Thanks for reading, lets hope we see these guys buzzing around for a long time
Thanks for reading, lets hope we see these guys buzzing around for a long time.

[498 words]

References

Brown, M. and Paxton, R. (2009). The conservation of bees: a global perspective. Apidologie, 40(3), pp.410-416.

Costanza, R., d’Arge, R., de Groot, R., Farber, S., Grasso, M., Hannon, B., Limburg, K., Naeem, S., O’Neill, R., Paruelo, J., Raskin, R., Sutton, P. and van den Belt, M. (1997). The value of the world’s ecosystem services and natural capital. Nature, 387, pp.253-260.

Le Conte, Y. and Navajas, M. (2008). Climate change: impact on honey bee populations and diseases. Rev. sci. tech. Of. int. Epiz, 27(2), pp.499-510.

Schweiger, O., Biesmeijer, J., Bommarco, R., Hickler, T., Hulme, P., Klotz, S., Kühn, I., Moora, M., Nielsen, A., Ohlemüller, R., Petanidou, T., Potts, S., Pyšek, P., Stout, J., Sykes, M., Tscheulin, T., Vilà, M., Walther, G., Westphal, C., Winter, M., Zobel, M. and Settele, J. (2010). Multiple stressors on biotic interactions: how climate change and alien species interact to affect pollination. Biological Reviews, 85, pp.777-795.

United Nations (2004) World Population to 2300, New York. [online] http://www.un.org/esa/population/ publications/longrange2/WorldPop2300final.pdf

Winfree, R., Aguilar, R., Vázquez, D., LeBuhn, G. and Aizen, M. (2009). A meta-analysis of bees’ responses to anthropogenic disturbance. Ecology, 90(8), pp.2068-2076.





Diamonds aren’t Forever, as Villainous Tourists have a ‘License to Kill’ the World’s Coral Reefs

Tourism is killing coastlines worldwide, destroying crucial coral reefs and the immense diversity within these ecosystems. Humans are irreversibly changing the marine environment!

There is a modern urge to travel the world; tropical, coastal areas increasingly visited for the sun and climate. More money in these regions puts natural systems at-risk, increased development and uncontrolled tourism affecting ecosystems such as coral reefs. Tourism has the ability to severely degrade coral reefs, introduced below (4earthTV, 2016).


Akumal Case Study

Akumal, Mexico, is an example of a coastline and reef ravaged by tourism. The number of hotel rooms in the region has increased by 80,000 in the last 30 years (Gil et al, 2015).
I have seen for myself the extent of the local environment change, which has had obvious negative effects on the health of the Mesoamerican barrier reef (BBC Earth, 2014).

In Akumal’s popular snorkeling areas, coral cover declined by 79% between 2011 and 2014. Globally, holiday activities have negative effects on the coral and on the native reef species (Gil et al, 2015). Turtle and shark populations suffer increased stress as tourism and tourists dominate the coastline (Constantine, 2001). Coral reefs are very sensitive to rapid tourism development, the popularity of these areas increasing algal cover and coral disease in the community (Garpow, 1999).

Tourism and boat traffic in Akumal Bay, Akumal (Photo: J. Houston)
Tourism and boat traffic in Akumal Bay, Akumal (Photo: J. Houston)

Hotel Pollution

Another consequence of global change are the septic tanks from growing hotel complexes, which feed coral reefs with nutrients, boosting the growth of algae and negatively changing the system. This clouds the water, meaning sunlight cannot reach the coral, causing unhealthy reef conditions (Garpow, 1999). Tourists are a huge environmental change impacting coral reefs. Coastal resorts attract the greatest number of tourists annually, often because of our growing desire to view coral reefs (Davenport & Davenport, 2006).

 

SCUBA Divers and Snorkelling

Worldwide, SCUBA divers and swimmers can severely damage the reef – in crowded areas, coral contact can lead to 100% mortality (Reef Resilience, 2016), inflicting abrasion and tissue loss (Davenport & Davenport, 2006). Tourists can also suffocate the coral, stirring up silt and encouraging algal domination. Coral reefs are also experiencing more boat traffic, which can disrupt coral communities, upsetting species interactions. Using boat anchors on the reef can damage the coral for decades, lowering reproductive health and species fitness (Rogers and Garrison, 2001).

Left: Snorkeler touching native turtle (Photo: J.Bartoszec, 2010). Right: Brain coral suffering anchor damage (Photo: Z. Livnat)
Left: Snorkeler touching native turtle (Photo: J.Bartoszec, 2010). Right: Brain coral suffering anchor damage (Photo: Z. Livnat)


The Future of Coral Reefs

There are global plans to increase tourism around coral reefs, building additional hotels. Human pollution will increase; sun-cream and E. coli contamination expected to impact reef health. Marine turtles are also developing tumours from a tourism-borne virus, demonstrating the reduced health of coral reefs and the species within them; all because of tourism (Sanchez-Navarro Russell, 2016).

Coral reefs across the world are experiencing problems associated with tourism. Fifty years ago reefs were untouched; only in the last 30 years have coral reefs become a primary tourist attraction. The coastline has changed so dramatically that slow-growing coral and the species within them cannot adapt fast enough and are suffering greatly.

Tourism has the potential to kill existing coral reefs; therefore, it is our responsibility to manage coastlines with greater effect, and as tourists, show greater respect towards the marine environment.

 

[483 words]

 

References

BBC Earth. (2014). The Struggle to Save the Caribbean’s Huge Barrier Reef. Available: http://www.bbc.co.uk/earth/story/20141128-the-other-great-barrier-reef. Last accessed 13th March 2017

Constantine (2001), Increased Avoidance of Swimmers by Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) due to Long-Term Exposure to Swim-With-Dolphin Tourism, Marine Mammal Science. 17 (4), p689-702.

Davenport and Davenport (2006), Impact of Tourism and Personal Leisure Transport on Coastal Environments: A Review. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 67, p280-292.

Garpow, W (1999), Sustainability Indicators Regarding Tourism Development and Coral Reef Conservation: A Case Study of Akumal in the Caribbean, Proceedings of the 1999 Northeastern Recreation Research Symposium. P23-29.

Gil et al (2015), Rapid Tourism Growth and Declining Coral Reefs in Akumal Mexico, Marine Biology. 162 (11), p2225-2233

Reef Resilience (2016), Tourism and Recreational Impacts. Available: http://www.reefresilience.org/coral-reefs/stressors/local-stressors/coral-reefs-tourism-and-recreational-impacts/. Last accessed 13th March 2017.

Rogers and Garrison (2001), Ten Years after the Crime: Lasting Effects of Damage from a Cruise Ship Anchor on a Coral Reef in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. Bulletin of Marine Science. 69 (2), p793-803.

Sanchez-Navarro Russell (2016), Akumal Suffering from Unsustainable Growth. Available: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/opinion/akumal-suffering-from-unsustainable-growth/. Last accessed 13th March 2017.

4earthTV. (2016). Coral Reef Conservation: 4earthTV. Available: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGcnzggMqKA. Last accessed 22nd March 2017.