TURLOCK,
CALIF. — In an almond orchard in California’s Central Valley, bee
inspector Neil Trent pried open a buzzing hive and pulled out a frame to see if
it was at least two-thirds covered with bees.
Trent
has hopped from orchard to orchard this month, making sure enough bees were in
each hive provided by beekeepers. Not enough bees covering a frame indicates an
unhealthy hive — and fewer working bees to pollinate the almond bloom, which
starts next week across hundreds of thousands of acres stretching from Red
Bluff to Bakersfield.
“The
bloom will come and go quickly,” said Trent, who works for the Bakersfield-based
bee broker Scientific Ag Co. “The question is: Will the almond seeds get set?
It depends if you have enough of a workforce of bees.”
That
has growers concerned as nomadic beekeepers from across the country converge on
the state with their semi-trucks, delivering billions of bees to the orchards
for the annual pollination. Most almond trees depend on bees to transfer pollen
from the flower of one tree variety to the flower of another variety before
fertilization, which leads to the development of seeds.
It’s
a daunting task: California’s orchards provide about 80 percent of the global
almond supply. And with almond acreage increasing steadily in recent years, the
bees must now pollinate 760,000 acres of trees. The number of bees needed is
expected to increase as almond demand grows and orchards continue to expand.
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