| Literature DB >> 35588040 |
Fay Kahane1, Juliet Osborne2, Sarah Crowley2, Rosalind Shaw2.
Abstract
Beekeepers are central to pollinator health. For policymakers and beekeeping organisations to develop widely accepted strategies to sustain honeybee populations alongside wild pollinators, a structured understanding of beekeeper motivations is essential. UK beekeepers are increasing in number, with diverse management styles despite calls for coordinated practice to manage honeybee health. Our Q methodology study in Cornwall, UK, indicated five beekeeping perspectives; conventional hobbyists, natural beekeepers, black bee farmers, new-conventional hobbyists and pragmatic bee farmers. Motivations can be shared across perspectives but trade-offs (notably between economic, social responsibility and ideological motivations) result in differing practices, some of which counter 'official' UK advice and may have implications for pollinator health and competition. Honeybee conservation emerged as a key motivator behind non-conventional practices, but wild pollinator conservation was not prioritised by most beekeepers in practice. Q methodology has the potential to facilitate non-hierarchical collaboration and conceptualisation of sustainable beekeeping, moving towards co-production of knowledge to influence policy.Entities:
Keywords: Apis mellifera mellifera; Co-production; Natural beekeeping; Sustainable beekeeping; Varroa; Wild pollinators
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35588040 PMCID: PMC9378798 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-022-01736-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 6.943
UK beekeeping groups and associations, used as a basis for purposive selection of participants
| Beekeeping group | Description | Website |
|---|---|---|
| British Beekeeping Association (BBKA) | Representing around 25 000 beekeepers via local organisations; promoting ‘official’ management practices as advised by the National Bee Unit (NBU) | |
| Bee Farmers Association | Representing over 500 bee farmers in the UK, who each have over 40 colonies (up to thousands) and produce honey in bulk for sale | |
| Natural Beekeeping Trust | Promoting a variety of ‘bee-centred’ approaches that reject many BBKA and NBU-advised practices | |
| Bee Improvement and Bee Breeders Association (BIBBA) | Aiming to conserve the European dark honeybee or ‘black bee’ |
Full Q set statements grouped by motivational theme (first column), with representative Q sort rankings for each of the five perspectives. +4 (green): strongly agree. -4 (red): strongly disagree
CH conventional hobbyists, NB natural beekeepers, BBF black bee farmers, NCH new-conventional beekeepers, PBF pragmatic bee farmers
Fig. 1Photograph of a Q sort in progress illustrating the grid layout for placement of the 43 Q set statement cards, ranked horizontally from -4 (strongly disagree, far left column) to +4 (strongly agree, far right column). Photo credit: F Kahane
Fig. 2Radar plots illustrating the 'loading 'of each participant (coloured line, n = 21) on to each perspective (pentagon point, n = 5). The closer the coloured line is to the pentagon point, the more that participant agrees with that perspective
Trade-offs taken by each perspective under conflicting motivations. Conservation ideology can encourage non-conventional practices (eg. no Varroa treatment). Relative rank of two conflicting statements is highlighted, alongside management decision
| Motivational themes leading to conventional management | Motivational themes leading to non-conventional management | Ranking of motivation to minimise disease spread (statement 26) | Ranking of motivation to conserve the honeybee (statement 36) | Management decision: treat for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional hobbyists | Personal, social responsibility | Ideological | + 3 | + 2 | Yes |
| Natural beekeepers | Ideological | 0 | + 4 | No | |
| Black bee farmers | Personal, economic, social responsibility | Ideological | + 2 | + 2 | Yes (minimal) |
| New-conventional hobbyists | Personal, economic, social responsibility | Ideological | + 1 | + 1 | Yes (minimal) |
| Pragmatic bee farmers | Personal, economic, social responsibility | + 3 | 0 | Yes |
Fig. 3Flow charts illustrating motivations underpinning Varroa management decisions (blue boxes) and swarm management (white boxes) based on qualitative interview data