Impacts of COVID-19 on Canadian Beekeeping: Survey Results and a Profitability Analysis

To gauge the impact of COVID-19 on the Canadian beekeeping sector, we conducted a survey of over 200 beekeepers in the fall of 2020. Our survey results show Canadian beekeepers faced two major challenges: 1) disrupted importation of honey bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) (queen and bulk bees) that maintai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of economic entomology 2021-12, Vol.114 (6), p.2245-2254
Hauptverfasser: Bixby, Miriam E. F, Polinsky, Matthew, Scarlett, Rod, Higo, Heather, Common, Julia, Hoover, Shelley E, Foster, Leonard J, Zayed, Amro, Cunningham, Morgan, Guarna, M. Marta
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container_title Journal of economic entomology
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creator Bixby, Miriam E. F
Polinsky, Matthew
Scarlett, Rod
Higo, Heather
Common, Julia
Hoover, Shelley E
Foster, Leonard J
Zayed, Amro
Cunningham, Morgan
Guarna, M. Marta
description To gauge the impact of COVID-19 on the Canadian beekeeping sector, we conducted a survey of over 200 beekeepers in the fall of 2020. Our survey results show Canadian beekeepers faced two major challenges: 1) disrupted importation of honey bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) (queen and bulk bees) that maintain populations; and 2) disrupted arrival of temporary foreign workers (TFWs). Disruptions in the arrival of bees and labor resulted in fewer colonies and less colony management, culminating in higher costs and lower productivity. Using the survey data, we develop a profitability analysis to estimate the impact of these disruptions on colony profit. Our results suggest that a disruption in either foreign worker or bee arrival allows beekeepers to compensate and while colony profits are lower, they remain positive. When both honey bee and foreign workers arrivals are disrupted for a beekeeper, even when the beekeeper experiences less significant colony health and cost impacts, a colony with a single pollination contract is no longer profitable, and a colony with two pollination contracts has significantly reduced profitability. As COVID-19 disruptions from 2020 and into 2021 become more significant to long-term colony health and more costly to a beekeeping operation, economic losses could threaten the industry's viability as well as the sustainability of pollination-dependent crop sectors across the country.The economic and agricultural impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic have exposed a vulnerability within Canada's beekeeping industry stemming from its dependency on imported labor and bees.Travel disruptions and border closures pose an ongoing threat to Canadian agriculture and apiculture in 2021 and highlight the need for Canada's beekeeping industry to strengthen domestic supply chains to minimize future risks.
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Using the survey data, we develop a profitability analysis to estimate the impact of these disruptions on colony profit. Our results suggest that a disruption in either foreign worker or bee arrival allows beekeepers to compensate and while colony profits are lower, they remain positive. When both honey bee and foreign workers arrivals are disrupted for a beekeeper, even when the beekeeper experiences less significant colony health and cost impacts, a colony with a single pollination contract is no longer profitable, and a colony with two pollination contracts has significantly reduced profitability. 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subjects Alien labor
Animals
Apiculture
APICULTURE & SOCIAL INSECTS
Apidae
Apis mellifera
bee importation
Beekeeping
beekeeping profit
Bees
Canada
Colonies
colony health
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Economics
Honey
Honeybee
Importation
Medical care, Cost of
Pandemics
Plant reproduction
Pollination
Polls & surveys
Profitability
SARS-CoV-2
Surveys
temporary foreign worker
title Impacts of COVID-19 on Canadian Beekeeping: Survey Results and a Profitability Analysis
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