SLU news

Power to the pollinators!

Published: 20 May 2024

Today, 20 May, is the World Bee Day, designated by the United Nations to raise awareness of the importance of pollinators, the threats they face and their contribution to sustainable development. SLU coordinates an expert group in South and Southeast Asia with the theme Pollination knowledge exchange for food, nutrition and livelihood security. Find out more about the expert group below.

A SIANI (Swedish International Agricultural Network Initiative) expert group in South and Southeast Asia has the theme Pollination knowledge exchange for food, nutrition and livelihood security. They work with communities that set up Living Labs to understand more about ways to strengthen pollination, food security, nutrition and livelihoods locally.

Four Living Labs have already been established – two each in India and Sri Lanka – and two more are starting in Laos and Nepal. The knowledge gained will help the group formulate transformative policy recommendations and practices for pollination services and beekeeping. There are many knowledge gaps when it comes to the recovery and conservation of pollinators in agricultural landscapes.

The overall aim is to develop a collaborative approach for the restoration and sustainable management of pollination services for smallholder farmers. Building on previous experiences from India and Sri Lanka, the experts work with communities, including landowners, entrepreneurs, advisors and local authorities.

The expert group consists of professionals from South and Southeast Asia and is coordinated by SLU. One of the SLU coordinators is Lotta Fabricius Kristiansen, research assistant at SLU RådNU, which is the National Center for Advisory Services.

 – On the whole, beekeeping has been in practice in rural/agricultural communities in both Sri Lanka and India, promoted by the respective state agricultural sectors but to date mainly as a marginal activity, Lotta Fabricius comments.

– Our observations in Sri Lanka emphasised the role of the State Ministry/Department playing the primary role of advice-giving, while NGOs (Non-governmental Organisations) and well-known individuals have supported with material inputs and further technical advice.

– In both countries, universities with agriculture education have played a role, in India this being more centrally organised through national research programmes, Lotta concludes.

Why is this important?

The decline in pollinators and biodiversity is a great cause for concern. Millions of smallholders throughout South and Southeast Asia get their food and income from producing crops that require pollination, for example fruits, nuts, vegetables and cash crops. These farmers can increase their food and nutrition security by shifting to practices that preserve or restore pollination. For some, beekeeping can also be a source of income.

We need policies and economic incentives that strengthen ecosystem services like pollination and ensure food security even when extreme weather events become increasingly more common.

Facts:

We all depend on the survival of bees

Bees and other pollinators, such as butterflies, bats and hummingbirds, are increasingly under threat from human activities.

Pollination is, however, a fundamental process for the survival of our ecosystems. Nearly 90% of the world’s wild flowering plant species depend, entirely, or at least in part, on animal pollination, along with more than 75% of the world’s food crops and 35% of global agricultural land. Not only do pollinators contribute directly to food security, but they are key to conserving biodiversity. (Source: The UN)

Read more at the UN's web pages about bees and other important pollinators


Contact

Lotta Fabricius Kristiansen CV page
Department of People and Society

Telephone: +4651167116, +46730577151
Email: lotta.fabricius@slu.se