Argentine beekeepers no longer in clover
By Helen Popper
CHIVILCOY, Argentina (Reuters) - Beekeepers had it easy when cattle roamed freely across the flower-filled meadows of Argentina's Pampas plains. But a boom in soy farming has changed all that.
The legendry prairies have fast become one of the most efficient swathes of cropland on Earth, leaving little room for wild flowers and leading beekeepers in the world's No. 1 honey exporter to move their hives and even sow their own flowers.
"They say that wherever the cow goes, the bee follows ... They live in harmony and both benefit from flowers. But things have changed," said Patricio Crespo, a vet and beekeeper from the town of Chivilcoy, a typical Pampas town that lies some 100 miles from the capital, Buenos Aires.
"It's a shame and it's sad, not just for beekeepers," he added.
Fields of soybeans, corn and wheat have spread across the fertile plains in recent years due to soaring global demand for food and biofuels.
Some ranchers and dairy farmers have moved their herds to distant provinces where soybeans do not flourish, and more and more animals are being reared in feedlots, freeing up valuable arable land for crops wherever possible.
Chivilcoy has seen a sharp reduction in its grazing area, alarming the district's 300 beekeepers who are battling falling honey production -- a picture played out across the region as wild flowers become scarcer.
Flowers provide bees with the nectar and pollen they need to feed and make honey, and a variety of species keeps them supplied for many months.
"Nowadays, the profits aren't what they used to be and there are virtually no fields left that aren't used for farming," Crespo said, adding that 13 percent more land around Chivilcoy would be planted with soy this season.
PROSPERITY
The arrival of genetically modified soy and surging demand from China has seen Argentina's production of the oilseed more than doubled within 10 years, catapulting the farming industry out of a decades-long decline.
Argentina is the world's No. 3 soy exporter behind the United States and Brazil and the crop accounts for nearly a quarter of total export earnings.
It has brought new prosperity to the sleepy towns of the Pampas and played an important role in the country's recovery from an economic crisis in 2001-02. But for beekeepers, it means industrialized farming that conspires against them.
"One of the characteristics of Argentina was that you didn't have to invest much to get good production, especially in the Pampas because of the meadows, prairies and the low-key agriculture before soy burst on the scene," said Lucas Martinez, president of the Argentine Beekeepers Society.
He said the average beehive used to produce up to 130 pounds of honey per year, but yields have fallen to a third of that in many places, meaning beekeepers need more colonies to maintain production. Continued...








