Honey Bees and Climate Change Video - Transcript
[music]
[music] Every year, farms and fields play host to a
symphony, of sorts. Polination... the springtime syncopation of flowering
plants and the animals that feast on the nectar and pollen they produce. Over
millenia, pollinators like honey bees have evolved a well-timed dance with
plants. But now, plants may be changing their tune. Spring green-up... ...when
plants wake from winter and sprout leaves. It's such a global phenomenon that
NASA satellites can see it from space.
[music]
[music] Sensors, such as Modis on NASA's AQUA and TERRA
satellites, can show us how green our planet is throughout the year - and
they've captured something strange. In the Northern U.S., spring green-up is
starting about a half-day earlier each year. The likely cause? Our warming
climate. But is pollination also moving earlier? The images can't detect
individual flowers, so scientists have been left to guess... until now. NASA
research scientist Wayne Esaias spearheads a special team gathering data
directly in the field. They're the honey bees in his Maryland backyard.
[Wayne Esaias:] "Honey bees are great data
collectors for understanding the processes of pollination. Bees fly two and a
half miles in all directions to scout for bee forage and bring back pollen and
nectar. So therefore they sample a very large range of environments."
Weighing the hives, Wayne can detect when nectar peaks and ebbs each year.
[Wayne Esaias:] "During the winter, the hive loses
weight as they eat the honey to feed the babies and keep warm. And then when
plants start blooming in abundance, the hive starts gaining weight. It can gain
a tremendous amount of weight. I've had a hive gain 25 pounds in one day."
Wayne's been keeping tabs on his bees for less than twenty years. But in that
time, pollination has moved more than ten days earlier.
[Wayne Esaias:] "That's completely in sync with what
the satellite data shows - the world here getting greener earlier in the spring
by about a half a day each year." here getting greener earlier in the
spring by about a half a day a year."
[music]
[Wayne Esaias:] "If we have a few scale hive
measurements with the wall-to-wall coverage of the satellite, we can then
extrapolate those scale hive measurements of when the nectar flows occur
extrapolate those scale hive measurements of when the nectar flows occur to
very large areas of the country." Now, to get a bee's eye perspective of
how pollination is changing in very different environments - say, deserts or
mountains - Wayne's doing a little '"networking."
[Wayne Esaias:] "HoneyBeeNet is a network of
citizen-scientist beekeepers that volunteered to weigh their hives to give us
more data points, to see how the nectar flows are changing in all different
parts of the country." If pollination dates keep creeping forward, plants
and pollinators could move out of sync. Currently, young bees are able able to
grow and get out on the hunt by the time plants bloom. But if plants bloom
before bees are ready, both miss out. The plants don't get pollinated, and the
bees go hungry. But more than just bees might miss a meal. NASA satellites can
help us understand how climate change might affect what's on our dinner table.
[Wayne Esaias:] "Modern agriculture requires bees as
part of the production. It's as mandatory for food production as as pieces of
irrigation pipe and fuel for tractors. So if we're to understand the impact of
climate change on our ecosystems, we must understand how this plant-pollinator
interaction is being impacted by climate change."