College of DuPage Brings Honeybees to Campus Natural Area


GLEN ELLYN, Ill., July 12, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- College of DuPage is buzzing about its new residents on campus.

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/20002078-4770-4845-b4ff-e5b48d62b091

Thanks to a grant from the Honeybee Conservancy, COD has installed a beehive in a natural area on the east side of campus. A partnership with Kline Creek Farm has provided the expertise and training for staff to maintain the beehive, which will not only benefit the surrounding natural areas with needed pollination but also function as a learning lab for students and visitors.

“The honeybee decline is an environmental problem that most people don’t know about,” said David Taylor, Instructor of Biology at College of DuPage. “We already bring classes to study our on-campus prairie reserves, and we hope the beehive adds to in-class discussions on pollination.”

According to the Honeybee Conservancy, 50 percent of Midwestern native bee species have disappeared over the last century. A study by the USDA and a partnership of bee groups found that 42 percent of managed honeybee colonies died between April 2014 and April 2015, the second-highest rate in nine years. This die-off threatens $15 billion worth of crops that require bee pollination.

Through its Sponsor-A-Hive program, the Honeybee Conservancy offers materials grants that consist of bees, their homes, beekeeping equipment and information on how to care for them. Hives are to be placed in locations that can bolster bee populations, advance science and environmental education, and pollinate locally grown food.

Because the College of DuPage campus in Glen Ellyn contains more than 40 acres of prairie and natural areas, Taylor, Biology Professor Shamili Ajgaonkar and Outdoor Lab/Prairie Manager Remic Ensweiler thought a beehive would be an ideal addition. In May, COD received more than 3,000 bees and the hive, which is now located in the nature area east of the McAninch Arts Center. The hive provides the substrate where the bees will build their honeycombs, which they start within a few days of the hive being installed.

Ajgaonkar said the College received another grant that is being used to build and install a second beehive on campus near the first one.

“In researching bees, we discovered that it was better to have two hives and colonies,” she said. “From an educational standpoint, each colony will have its own distinct characteristics.”

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