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19

Sep

2009

Leaving the Bees Be: Why Vegans Won't Eat Honey
written by Mickey Z
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Why Don't Vegans Eat Honey?
by Mickey Z.
There are many valid reasons, including Colony Collapse Disorder.

Most non-vegans seem to get why some people won't eat meat. It gets a little less clear when the topics are eggs and dairy products...but the reasons can be provided and debated. When things turn to bees and honey, however, the reactions range from incredulity to sheer mockery.
 
In other words, a good explanation of why vegans eschew honey is needed.

It starts with a core understanding of what it means for most people to be a vegan.
 
"Veganism is a way of living which excludes all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, the animal kingdom, and includes a reverence for life," writes Jo Stepaniak.
 
[For complete article links, please see source at Planet Green here.


 
As detailed by PETA, "Like other factory-farmed animals, honeybees are victims of unnatural living conditions, genetic manipulation, and stressful transportation ... Profiting from honey requires the manipulation and exploitation of the insects' desire to live and protect their hive."
 
To which, Stepaniak adds: "Even the most careful keeper cannot help but squash or otherwise kill many of the bees in the process. During unproductive months, some beekeepers may starve their bees to death or burn the hive to avoid complex maintenance."

It should not be a surprise that many of those seeking to exclude "all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, the animal kingdom," would avoid the conscious manipulation of bees. The goal is not purity, of course. Instead, veganism often comes down to an issue of intent.

I know what some of you are thinking: They're just bees. Lighten up. It just so happens that bees are extremely intelligent and studies have demonstrated that they feel pain. Plus, the standard retort of "they're only insects" the above description of why some people would adopt a compassionate vegan lifestyle in the first place.

Recent events have provided the most powerful--and very, very green--reason why the earth-friendly crowd might refrain from honey consumption: Colony Collapse Disorder. Like many things about nature, we humans take honeybees for granted. But, as we're learning, a major portion of our food relies on bees at the critical early stages of its development. This is why the sudden disappearance of honeybees, a.k.a. Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), is all the more alarming. "The bee losses are especially distressing in light of a study last year that concluded that pollinators such as bees, birds and bats affect 35% of the world's crop production, increasing the output of 87 of the leading food crops worldwide," writes Jasmin Malik Chua.

The cause (or causes) of CCD are not yet understood. Some of the proposed causes include "environmental change-related stresses malnutrition, pathogens (i.e., disease including Israel acute paralysis virus), mites, pesticides such as neonicotinoids or imidacloprid, genetically modified (GM) crops with pest control characteristics such as transgenic maize, and migratory beekeeping."

What does drizzling some honey on your morning granola have to do with all this? Here's PETA again: "BeeCulture magazine reports that beekeepers are notorious for contributing to the spread of disease: 'Beekeepers move infected combs from diseased colonies to healthy colonies, fail to recognize or treat disease, purchase old infected equipment, keep colonies too close together, [and] leave dead colonies in apiaries.' Artificial diets, provided because farmers take the honey that bees would normally eat, leave bees susceptible to sickness and attack from other insects. When diseases are detected, beekeepers are advised to 'destroy the colony and burn the equipment,' which can mean burning or gassing the bees to death."

All this for something not necessary for human nutritional needs. "Humans can live quite well without sugar or honey," says Stepaniak. "As a rule, extensive use of sweeteners is found only in affluent societies." In other words, honey is a novelty food that has not only spawned a massive global industry, it's also helped put one of nature's critical species in danger. *If the demand for honey were to lessen and ultimately vanish, the bees might be saved along with much of the human food supply.

Let's bring it down to basics: After a bee swallows floral nectar, it is partially digested in its primary stomach where the bee adds its own digestive secretion. It is then regurgitated. This bee vomit is called honey and is considered to be food by the people who take it from the hives. However, whether honey is produced locally or on an industrial scale, two realities remain:

   1. Bees will inevitably be killed in the process
   2. There is no nutritional reason for humans to consume honey

Four Ways Vegans (and non-Vegans) Can Potentially Help the Bees and the Planet:

   1. Stop buying and eating honey (along with beeswax, propolis, royal jelly, and other products that come from bees).
   2. If you have a serious honey habit and need to transition slowly, choose locally produced honey for now.
   3. Learn more about CCD and what you can do.
   4. Switch to delicious, non-exploitative green sweeteners.  
 
 
 

*Editor's Note: How best to help the bees is in debate. Watch The Last Beekeeper on Planet Green for an insightful look at the plight of bees and their beekeepers.

Related Posts
Green Glossary: Fruitless Fall

 

 

 
Comments (14)Add Comment
bee keeper, Lowly rated comment [Show]
Locally-produced?
written by Adam Kochanowicz, September 19, 2009
I believe it was an error to recommend to people unable to eat less honey to switch to locally produced honey. This strengthens the fallacy that because it is local, it is supposedly more humane. I have no idea why a switch to honey is so difficult, but one can simply use agave nectar instead.
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It's not ours to take..., Lowly rated comment [Show]
best to eat organic, bee keeper
written by veglib, September 20, 2009
Excellent presentation. This topic is definitely something that even ethical vegans don't completely understand unless they're familiar with the intricacies of beekeeping. My husband and I had a "hobby" hive many years ago when we lived in Africa, and I agree that bee deaths are definitely unavoidable in beekeeping, even on a small scale.

As for the bee keeper's comment, all I can say is, humans haven't figured out a way to survive as breatharians, but as ethical vegans, we can try to avoid the most animal-cruel foods, i.e., plant-based foods grown in factory farming (because, after all, wildlife is inevitably killed in the process of clearing land and maintaining and growing the huge agribusiness crops). To lessen negative human impact on bees and other wild creatures, eat organic or grow your own.
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wildlife deaths, Lowly rated comment [Show]
Lots of misinformation in this article - down right misleading
written by bud dingler, September 20, 2009
and what would you expect from non beekeepers?

a worker bees lives 6 weeks in summer. killing a couple of dozen bees (not "many" as article suggests) in a hive of 60,000 bees is inconsequential. Since beekeeper maintained hives have more bees then wild hives that point is mute.

another laughable point ion the article

During unproductive months, some beekeepers may starve their bees to death or burn the hive to avoid complex maintenance."

WTF? beekeepers lkove their bees and in times of starvation feed the bees to make sure they get through thr tough times. thats what we do as beekeeper is help the bees stupid!

there is one disease foulbrood which has no cure and some hive parts are burned or else the bees will die. typically the bees are transferred to new clean equipment before the old equipment is destroyed.

the good balls who write this crap just look around for quotes that fit their own echo chamber whether the quote is out of context is not considered as they no jack about bees. thats the problem with bloggers they are often mindless robots linking and pasting about topics they no nothing about.


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Comment intelligence, Lowly rated comment [Show]
...
written by bud dingler, September 21, 2009
honeybees need honey to live on and its in the beekeepers best interest to make sure that happens. once they have enough honey in the brood nest we put on extra boxes to collect SURPLUS honey that we can safely take for human consumption without shorting the bees.

the vast bulk of beekeepers are ethical and would not take honey from the brood nest. as with the rest of the human population there are good and bad people - you got to believe in something and I choose to believe that people and BEEKEEPERS are good people. If you wish to have a negative view of the the world and insist that all beekeepers are bad people and out to kill bees etc thats your call.

all i can tell you is most beekeeper don't like seeing their bees die!
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Honey - not so sweet for the bees
written by vegan future, September 21, 2009
Great article Mickey.

Readers, please forward this article along with this Vegan Society Leaflet
http://www.scribd.com/doc/14171578/Honey-Aint-So-Sweet-for-the-Bees
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Without bees, we have no food., Lowly rated comment [Show]
What about honey bee pollinated crops?
written by apisamiga, January 09, 2010
If part of the logic against honey is that the movement of colonies can contribute to the spread of disease, why then are crops pollinated by hired honey bee colonies accepted in the vegan diet? If you are against the consumption of honey, do you also refrain from almonds? Peaches? Avocados?
I hope that this does not sound antagonistic, I'm just curious.
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...
written by JCB, January 29, 2010
"If we could just shift our food choices, it will certainly help save the bees."

It's comments like these that make me laugh. How do you know this? No one knows what causes CCD. There is absolutely NO WAY of knowing one way or another what would happen. It could help, it could change absolutely nothing and infact even lessen the number of bees. Just no way to know.

[What do you base your assertions on Bastard? The ONLY way to "know" things is to experiment. You seem to be suggesting NOTHING. - ed.]
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killing birds for honey
written by Sylvia, April 21, 2010
Honey is not as pure and natural as it seems. In the Philippines, one of the top bee keepers has resorted to shooting the birds that eat his bees to protect his hives. This is a fellow who promotes his products as organic and natural and claims that visiting his farm will teach people to "respect life". The birds are Blue Tailed Bee Eaters (Merops philippinus. Unfortunately, when people are trying to make a business out of bee keeping, they will resort to shooting birds that threaten their bottom line rather than accept that it's natural for Bee Eater birds to want to eat bees.

Wild honey gatherers kill the entire bee colony when they get the honey.
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written by Nina, May 13, 2010
If beekeepers stopped keeping bees than PETA members wouldn't have anything to eat. No more almonds and a whole lotta nothing else.
BTW/the most recent research clearly shows CCD is very much linked to the use of pesticides and herbicides plus aging queens. Unless vegans are willing to stop eating what they presently consume they'd better take stock of what honeybees are actually responsible for pollinating and thanks to beekeepers they are able to keep our food sources alive. Pesticides are wiping out honeybees in nature equally as fast as they do on commercial lots. Those bumble bees and native bees don't even come close to getting the job done. All those who support PETA should read "the vegetarian myth" by Lierre Keith.

[So, are you about getting rid of pesticides, or PETA? -ed.]
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