A new study shows the pollen a queen bee eats affects the survival of her nest -- Read and share our stories!
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Photo by Nnorozoff

Queen honeybees have a pretty cushy life. Living inside the hive, worker bees take care of most tasks like collecting pollen and nectar, producing honey, and fixing up the hive. But that’s not the case for queen bumblebees.

For most of their life, the fuzzy, fat, black-and-yellow bees in the genus Bombus fly solo and have to fatten up after hibernation, found a colony, and raise a batch of baby workers before they get a day off. Those weeks as a single mother are perilous for bumblebees, which rely on early-blooming flowers to survive the spring.

A new study shows that the more diverse the flowers the queen bees can access, the better off the bees are in the long run.

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Help Save Our Bees and the Planet!: Get Congress to pass critical protections for pollinators.

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New Podcast: The Overstory: In Episode 6 of The Overstory takes a trip to Miami's "Little Haiti" neighborhood, whichis grappling with "climate gentrification" as rising sea levels and sunny day flooding make the city's high elevation districts attractive to developers. Mr. Green, our advice columnist, talks about the environmental impacts of dogs. And we hear from a cancer survivor who is battling plastic pollution in Great Britain by paddling all of England's rivers.

The Latest Issue of Sierra MagazineCheck out the new May/June issue.

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