Now the plants are linked to another sad event: Their primary pollinators, a group of more than 60 yellow-faced bee species in the genus Hylaeus, are disappearing fast. So fast that on September 30, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service deemed seven Hylaeus species as endangered—the first bees ever on the list. (See seven intimate pictures that reveal the beauty of bees.)
In the early 1900s, yellow-faced bees were the most abundant Hawaiian insects, ranging from the coastlines to the mountains and even the subalpine slopes of Mauna Kea.
Yet habitat loss, invasive species, and climate change have hit Hawaii's only native bees so hard that they're now one of the state's least observed pollinators. Only two known populations of H. anthracinus, one of the most studied species, remain on the island of Oahu, and a few small populations are scattered across several other islands, according to recent surveys.
"What we saw was really alarming—" says Cynthia King, an entomologist with Hawaii's Division of Forestry and Wildlife.
In 2010, the state government stepped up efforts to learn more about the bees. Around the same time, the invertebrate nonprofit Xerces Society submitted a petition to federally protect seven yellow-faced bees. Saving these species is a "necessary part" of the White House's strategy to protect pollinators, says Xerces executive director Scott Black.
as much as I despise bees, it's actually kinda sad. They have a purpose. I just don't want them buzzing around me. Now mosquitos and hornets, y'all can go. Y'all contribute nothing.
as much as I despise bees, it's actually kinda sad. They have a purpose. I just don't want them buzzing around me. Now mosquitos and hornets, y'all can go. Y'all contribute nothing.