Bee-ware! What Happens if Bees Go Extinct? | By Parveena Yousuf (@pxrvxnx)

by - May 21, 2025

by @pxrvxnx
Imagine a world without your favourite coffee, your go-to dopamine booster (I meant chocolates), fruits, nuts, etc. No buzz in gardens, no colour in fields. Just silence. Most importantly, most of the shelves in supermarkets are…empty. It sounds like a tale from a distant future, but it's closer than we think.

Every year on May 20, we mark World Bee Day—a quiet reminder of how much we owe these tiny pollinators, who are more than just honey-makers that keep our ecosystem alive. But this World Bee Day, we are not just celebrating these sweet pollinators, we’re talking about survival. We are asking what happens if the bees are gone? Why is it happening? And how might we stop that silence from settling in?

The Bee-pocalypse: What’s at stake?
If the bees disappeared tomorrow, the world wouldn’t end in a snap of fingers. First, the buzz of bees fades from the gardens. Then, the flowers stop blooming. The market looks a little emptier. Apples and strawberries, out of season. Coffee? Too expensive! Almonds? Now a luxury. Fields turn quiet. Harvest falls short. No bees mean no pollination. No pollination means no food!

More than 75% of the world’s crops rely on pollinators, and bees are their brightest workers. Without them, the ecosystem will collapse like a tall building in an earthquake, along with the economy. Farmers would lose crops, prices would skyrocket, and communities relying on agriculture would struggle to survive. While staple crops like wheat and rice may survive without them, a world without bees would be a world with far less food diversity, nutrition, and joy. And yes! I know what you’re thinking. The technology is developing rapidly. There’s artificial intelligence. Surely, there are robot bees—tiny drones that do artificial pollination. But here is the truth: they’re bee-yond expensive and far from being able to replace the natural pollinators in our current time. Bees don’t just land on flowers. They feel. They nurture. We can't program instinct, and we certainly can't replace the rhythm of nature.

Hive in crisis: Bee-ing under attack
Now, imagine you’re a bee. Rising, the sunlight peeking into your hive, wings still sticky with sleep. You step out, expecting the familiar warmth, colour, and petals. But something’s off, something’s wrong… The flowers you used to know, they’re now gone. Once, you danced flower to flower, drunk on nectar. What remains are only endless fields of a single crop—corn, wheat, soy—blooming all at once, and then vanishing. You fly further. When you do land on a pretty, kind flower, it tastes strange. Sharp. What you don't know is that it’s been sprayed with neonicotinoid, a pesticide that scrambles your memory and weakens your body. You try to return home, but you can’t remember the way.

As the days go by, you feel your hive beginning to shrink. Not just from hunger, but from something far worse. Something tiny, clinging. A parasite—varroa mite, drinking on your strength, bringing disease into your hive. Then, one morning, when you manage to return home, no one was there except your queen. Not the guards, the young bees. Only a handful of the adult bees were present. The stored food was still there. The humans have a name for it: Colony Collapse Disorder. And the world keeps changing. The weather forgets its rhythm. Spring arrives too soon, storms steal the blossoms, and summer burns too long. Your kind lives by nature’s clock… and now the clock is broken. You were born to dance with flowers. Now, you fly alone, wondering what happened to the world that once bloomed for you.

That’s how bees feel —with pesticides, parasites, and climate chaos. They’re disappearing. And if we don’t act soon, we might lose them forever.

Bee the change: Small, sweet solutions
Not all is lost… not yet. The world that once blossomed can bloom again. But it starts with us. You don’t need a farm or a forest to help the bees. A pot of flowers on your balcony, petals in blue, purple or white since bees love them, a patch of wild still left in your yard, or even letting twigs and dead wood lie undisturbed—these little acts matter more than you think. Swap out harsh pesticides for natural options or companion planting. Buy local honey if you can, as each jar supports a beekeeper nurturing thousands of tiny lives.

If you’re a gardener or farmer, your choices shape the world bees live in. Reducing chemical use, keeping flower-rich hedgerows, and avoiding monoculture practices can give bees the safe havens they’re desperate for. And if you’re a student? Speak out. Plant a pollinator corner, create awareness —your voice, your window box, your curiosity, all carry power.

These actions may feel small. But so are bees, and they hold the world together. So this World Bee Day, let’s not just admire them. Let’s plant, protect, and promise them a world that blooms again. Because when the bees thrive, the Earth hums a little brighter!

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