Bees are becoming extinct because of parasite, habitat loss, and cell phones. There are farms that raise commercial honey bees, and ship them to other farms. People can help to reverse the extinction by planting flowers that bees are attracted to, and by not using pesticides in their gardens. Another way to help reverse this is to support local beekeepers by purchasing their honey.
A lot of the stories about bee extinction start off with a mild statement like "The bees will all die and we'll have no food!" While Alfred Einstein is often quoted about the impact of bee disappearance on human life - it should be pointed out that he is a genius when it comes to math and physics, but his qualifications as an apiarist (bee keeper) or biologist are somewhat less clear.
First off bees are not the only crop pollinators our there. Numerous other insects and birds pollinate crops. Before the introduction of the European Honeybee into North America in the 1600's these other critters ha to carry the burden.
Some native bee species are in decline (such as bumblebees) are in decline potentially due to climate change. The problems affecting honeybees such as colony collapse disorder are of importance to commercial bee growers and may be due to the high concentrations of honey bees in an area due to commercial operations.
It is unlikely that bees will become extinct. The European honeybee (one species out of many) may face problems as a viable farmed animal. These are some 20,000 species of bees in the world (maybe more) and the disappearance of one may require the introduction of another.
Many factors include but are not limited to: temperature change (global warming), airborne chemicals (pollution), parasites that infiltrate colonies, and radio waves e.g. cell towers that may interrupt the natural ways in which bees navigate. These are only possible factors, the real fear is that nobody actually knows why they are dying out so fast.
Answer
If all the bees die out we will have no flowers, fruit, vegetables and other plants.
Answer
If all the bees die out the pollinating of the plants and other foods will die out too.
Honeybees are not going extinct. Honeybees are affected by many factors, such as, mites, hive beetles, wax moths, starvation, viruses, climate, parasites and predators. A new problem, CCD or Colony Collapse Disorder, arose several years ago with the disappearance of a large number of domestic hives and it is being attributed to several factors including stress, pesticides, and a parasitic fly.
No, if they were extinct, then we wouldn't be getting honey in our grocery stores. There are many honeybee farms around the nation and still some wild honeybees as well.
When there are none left to breed.
You for it will die
we would all die, mwuhahahahaha
All would be fine and no one would die at all :)
No, bees are insects, and all insects are invertebrates. They have a hard outer casing called an exoskeleton.
All honey is made by bees, therefore it is natural. If it is not made by bees then it is not honey.
we all die we all die
If bees die out, humans will also. As bees pollinate all the plants we eat.
all of the plants would die and the grass and the trees
The bees that die : Honey bee. The bees do not die : Hornets, Yellowjackets/wasps, and bumblebees. those are the bees i know that die/do not die
African honey bees, like all other honey bees, have barbed stings and if they lose them they will die.
If bees vanish everything would eventually die... Watch the bee movie this would he a very similar situation
It will be invaded by wax moth.
Flowers and plants would not be pollenated and they would die.
when bees sting you they die. but wasps when they sting you they stay alive.
We all DIE!
if all bees die out, and are not able to polinate, we will die within four years.
they all die except for the queen who hibernates in the ground Bees usually spend the winter inside of their hive.