Pesticide exposure
Bees encounter pesticides through contaminated nectar, pollen, water, and direct contact while foraging. Neonicotinoids, organophosphates, and certain fungicides can impair navigation, weaken immune response, and cause brood losses or colony collapse. Identifying and reducing pesticide sources within the 3-5 km foraging range is essential for colony survival.
- Relocate hives away from pesticide-treated areas4
Move your apiary at least 3-5 km from fields, orchards, or residential areas with known pesticide applications. Scouting a location surrounded by diverse wildflower meadows, woodlands, or organic farmland dramatically reduces colony exposure to harmful chemicals.
📌 best practice4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ Hive straps, hive carrier or truck, foam entrance blocks, smoker
- Set up a clean water source near the apiary3
Place a dedicated, clean water source within 15 meters of your hives so bees drink from it instead of from puddles in pesticide-treated fields, drainage ditches, or chemically treated swimming pools. A shallow basin with landing stones or floating corks gives bees safe access without drowning risk.
📌 diy📌 low cost4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ Shallow basin or dish, stones or floating corks, water source
- Coordinate with neighbors and farmers on spray timing3
Talk to farmers, landowners, and neighbors within 5 km of your apiary about their pesticide schedules. Request they spray in the evening (after 7 PM) or early morning (before 7 AM) when bees are not actively foraging, and ask for advance notice so you can temporarily close hive entrances during…
📌 best practice📌 free4/16/2025, 9:22:01 PM
🛠️ None