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June 4, 2025

Bee truck crashes pose steep economic losses for beekeepers, says expert

Beekeepers preparing to unload hives into almond orchards for pollination services. Credit: Brittney Goodrich
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Beekeepers preparing to unload hives into almond orchards for pollination services. Credit: Brittney Goodrich

When a semi-truck carrying hundreds of honey bee colonies in Washington state last week, it wasn't just a roadside mess—it was a potentially devastating economic blow to the beekeeping operation behind it, said Brittney Goodrich, assistant professor of agricultural and consumer economics in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Commercial beekeepers in the U.S. routinely transport hives by truck, moving between crops that require and regions where blooming flowers support production. Each semi-truckload typically carries 400 to 480 hives, Goodrich estimates based on her .

According to USDA values, each honey bee colony is worth about $129, and a woodenware is valued at $230 per hive. So if a truck carrying 450 colonies tips over, that could amount to a potential loss of more than $160,000, she calculated.

"Such a loss can be extremely devastating to a beekeeping operation. Not to mention, many operations were already struggling with ," she said, referencing research led by the USDA Agricultural Research Service.

Even when some colonies are recovered, the cleanup process and the delay as bees return to their hives often mean lost income from both honey production and contracted pollination services.

"It looks like the beekeeper may have been able to recover some of the colonies, but the cleanup time and time spent waiting on bees to return to the colonies means they likely lost out on income from honey production or pollination services. This lost income is in addition to increased labor and input costs required to restore health," Goodrich added.

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Crashes involving trucks transporting honey bee colonies can result in economic losses exceeding $160,000 per incident, considering the combined value of bees and hives. Such events compound existing challenges from recent high colony losses, and even partial recovery of colonies leads to further income loss from disrupted honey production and pollination services, as well as increased restoration costs.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.