"Once the bee disappears from the earth, man has only four years to live. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more people." This quote by Albert Einstein from 1949 describes the great importance of the small black and yellow insects.
The European honeybee (Apis mellifera) is mainly native to Europe, the Near East and Africa. It not only produces honey and wax, but also contributes decisively to the food supply of humans by pollinating flowers. Honeybees and wild bees, as well as other insects, pollinate a large part of the native crops and wild plants, e.g. fruit trees, cucumbers, strawberries and sunflowers.
Bee mortality has many reasons
Today, bee mortality is omnipresent. There are very few wild honeybees left. Without beekeepers the small animals could no longer exist, because they are threatened by numerous factors. Insecticides and poisons, including from agriculture, monotonous agricultural landscapes, climate change and also the overbreeding of bees are having an influence on the decline of bee populations worldwide. Reason enough for us to bring about 50,000 of the small biological micro-agents to the company headquarters in Verl to support the survival of honeybees.