Are these the same almond farms that also kill swaths of bees from the pesticides etc they use?
Is this a damage control article or something?
This community is all about bees and beekeeping. Your one-stop shop for best beekeeping practices supported by science, exciting new bee research, beekeeping Q&A, etc.
The focus is primarily on keeping Apis mellifera, but discussion of all bee species, even if they aren't managed by beekeepers, is welcome.
Are these the same almond farms that also kill swaths of bees from the pesticides etc they use?
Is this a damage control article or something?
No, it looks like a nature-based solution experiment. These are important and have wider consequences that benefit general ecological studies.
I should also clarify that agroecological studies like this get a lot of funding for commerce reasons but do have a lot of implications for biodiversity and rewilding work as obviously healthy, happy environments get more yield. Coral reefs also exhibit similar behaviour with sound.