Mark L. Winston is Professor and Senior Fellow at Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Dialogue and Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences.
Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive
Paperback
(Reprint)
Being among bees is a full-body experience, Mark Winston writesfrom the low hum of tens of thousands of insects and the pungent smell of honey and beeswax, to the sight of workers flying back and forth between flowers and the hive. The experience of an apiary slows our sense of time, heightens our awareness, and inspires awe. Bee Time presents Winston’s reflections on three decades spent studying these creatures, and on the lessons they can teach about how humans might better interact with one another and the natural world.
Like us, honeybees represent a pinnacle of animal sociality. How they submerge individual needs into the colony collective provides a lens through which to ponder human societies. Winston explains how bees process information, structure work, and communicate, and examines how corporate boardrooms are using bee societies as a model to improve collaboration. He investigates how bees have altered our understanding of agricultural ecosystems and how urban planners are looking to bees in designing more nature-friendly cities.
The relationship between bees and people has not always been benign. Bee populations are diminishing due to human impact, and we cannot afford to ignore what the demise of bees tells us about our own tenuous affiliation with nature. Toxic interactions between pesticides and bee diseases have been particularly harmful, foreshadowing similar effects of pesticides on human health. There is much to learn from bees in how they respond to these challenges. In sustaining their societies, bees teach us ways to sustain our own.
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What can we learn from bees and beekeepers? Bees, explains Winston (academic director, Ctr. for Dialogue, Simon Fraser Univ.) tell engaging stories. Beekeepers show gratitude with honey. Patient scientists uncover the secrets of bee pheromones. The hive's communication inspires deliberative democracy. Colony collapse disorder heralds the end of "industrial agriculture," and worker bees exemplify communitarianism. Sadly, Winston chooses facts and inflates numbers' significance to squeeze bees into his ideology. He claims the dialog and deliberative democracy movements are "exploding" with tens to hundreds of thousands of members; since the adult population of the United States is 242 million, this is hardly an explosion. The author also fails to mention that workers sometimes kill a failing queen, a newly emerged queen slays her rivals, and workers expel drones to die. Winston's chapter on colony collapse disorder says nothing about efforts to improve colony survival by breeding mite-resistant strains or feeding overwintering hives pollen substitutes, and he is silent about sustainable farming's possible effect on food prices. VERDICT For discovering the quirky personalities behind bees, this book is enjoyable. For learning about and appreciating bees, Rowan Jacobsen's Fruitless Fall and Chris O'Toole's Bees: A Natural History are better choices.—Eileen H. Kramer, Georgia Perimeter Coll. Lib., Clarkston