
Mexico has great biodiversity in birds, amphibians, plants, and insects. Diverse species require abundant and varied vegetation, and that depends on a healthy population of pollinators.
The country’s farmers rely on pollinators, too. Like other countries around the world, Mexico has experienced a decline in its bee population due to loss of vegetation and increased use of fertilizers and agrochemicals on plants the bees visit.
Add to that, the varroa mite. The enemy of beekeepers throughout the world has found its way to Mexico. When the mite showed up in the U.S. and Canada, Mexico closed its borders to U.S. bees. But it was only a matter of time until the destructive parasite showed up in our southern neighbor’s colonies.
The decline has economic implications. Mexico has 42,000 honey producers operating 2 million beehives. Honey exports bring about 56 million (US) dollars into the Mexican economy.
Mexico is home to native bees that live in small colonies and make honey. And many indigenous communities engage in beekeeping, cultivating and harvesting honey with pre-colonization methods, like using clay pots to house bees.
But the domesticated European beepollinates many more plants and produces much more honey. The two main production areas are the Yucatan Peninsula and the states of Chiapas, Veracruz, and Guerrero.
Adding to the country’s beekeeping woes, Mexico has been under severe drought and faced extreme heat, especially in the northern part of the country. This exacerbated the problems facing domestic and wild bees.
Bees are dying in huge numbers because the lack of rain drastically reduced wild flower blooms. The bees went looking for pollen in fields with crops. Chemicals killed them, as well as pests.
The northern state of Chihuahua has a dry or semi-dry climate at the best of times, but rainfall has been unusually low in recent years. Dams and lagoons have emptied.
Farmers decided to leave land unplanted and use scarce water to keep long-standing groves of walnut trees from dying. One longtime beekeeper said that in his memory, the landscape has never been so bleak.
Mexico’s southern states have not been immune from lack of rainfall and high heat. Last year, beekeepers mounted a campaign to rescue wild bees that had no water or food sources, because the farmers needed them to pollinate their crops.
