bee |
Bees, butterflies
and other pollinators are increasingly under threat from human
activities and countries must transform their agricultural practices to
ensure global crop production can meet demand and avoid substantial
economic losses, the United Nations Conference on Biological Diversity
heard today.
"Pollinators affect
all of us. The food that we eat like our fruits and vegetables, our
coffee and chocolate, all rely on pollinators. However, pollinators are
facing many challenges, from intensive agriculture, pesticides, climate
change, which are putting a lot of pressure on them," said Simon Potts
Professor at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom, who is the
co-chair of a major report on pollinators being discussed in Cancun,
Mexico, today at the 13th Conference of the Parties of the Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD), also known as COP 13.
"There are many
solutions and policies that countries can adopt to protect pollinators,
so the trick here in Cancun is for countries to take these ideas and
really make them work," he added.
According to the
global assessment on pollinators produced by the Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES),
75 per cent of our food crops and nearly 90 per cent of wild flowering
plants depend to some extent on animal pollination, which is the
transfer of pollen between the male and female parts of flowers to
enable fertilization and reproduction.
In addition, the annual value of global crops that depend on pollinators is estimated to be worth $577 billion.
Without
pollinators, crops such as coffee, cacao and apples would drastically
suffer, and changes in global crop supplies could increase prices to
consumers and reduce profits to producers, resulting in a potential
annual net loss of economic welfare of $160 billion to $191 billion
globally.
Beyond food,
pollinators also contribute directly to medicines, biofuels, fibres like
cotton and linen, and construction materials.
"Pollination
services are an 'agricultural input' that ensures the production of
crops. All farmers, especially family farmers and smallholders around
the world, benefit from these services," said José Graziano da Silva,
Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the (FAO)
in the report's foreword.
"Improving
pollinator density and diversity has a direct positive impact on crop
yields, consequently promoting food and nutrition security. Hence,
enhancing pollinator services is important for achieving the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs), as well as for helping family farmers'
adaptation to climate change."
The majority of
pollinator species are wild, including more than 20,000 species of bees,
some species of flies, butterflies, moths, wasps, beetles, birds, bats
and other vertebrates. Currently, 16 per cent of vertebrate pollinators,
and more than 40 per cent of invertebrate pollinators, are facing
global extinction.
The report, which
was released earlier this year, offers a number of solutions to halt the
decline in pollinators. Some of these include: the promotion of
sustainable agriculture, creating greater diversity of pollinator
habitats in agricultural and urban landscapes, crop rotation, using
indigenous local knowledge and decreasing use of pesticides.
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