CAPTAIN COOK, Hawaii Island 鈥 One of the Big Island鈥檚 biggest exports also is one of its smallest.
Shipments of honey bees 鈥 or more precisely just the vital queen bees 鈥 are literally flying off the island.
Annual sales range from $8 million to $13 million, said Darcy Oishi, who runs the Hawaii Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Biological Control Section.
At the going rate of $20 to $40 apiece, that鈥檚 a lot of queen bees. And many, many more are needed by mainland farmers.
鈥淚 turn away orders for thousands of queens every year,鈥 said Russ Olivarez, who along with his wife, Karen, have owned and run Karrus Queens since 2007.
The queen bee industry generates at least double Hawaii鈥檚 $4.1 million in yearly honey sales, state Department of Agriculture figures show.
鈥淗awaii is home to the largest queen bee producers in the world, providing 25 percent of queen bees shipped to the mainland U.S. and 75 percent of the queens shipped to Canada,鈥 according to the department’s .
Nearly all of Hawaii鈥檚 queens come from Captain Cook, a rural South Kona community known for its coffee production. Situated on the protected leeward side of Mauna Loa at about 1,000-foot elevation, Captain Cook鈥檚 warm, consistent temperatures permit queens to be raised year-round.
鈥淏eing in Captain Cook allows us the greatest chance of maybe anywhere in the world of allowing mating days to happen,鈥 said Olivarez, a second-generation beekeeper whose farm is one of four, all on Hawaii Island, that the state has certified to ship bees to the mainland.
Virgin queens have four or fewer days to complete the mating process, which cannot occur if the weather is bad, Olivarez said.
鈥淚t provides us with these pristine days we need for mating queens,鈥 he said of the Captain Cook environment.
Big Island queens are the only ones available during January and February when it鈥檚 too cold for California growers to produce, said Olivarez, who grew up on a Northern California bee farm his father started in 1967.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a massive amount of queens that come from here (Captain Cook), and without them, it would make a huge impact on the mainland as well as Canada,鈥 Olivarez said.
Indeed, the Big Island queens help to feed the world.
One-third of all the food we eat comes from crops that bees pollinated, according to the Apiary Program.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a global impact,鈥 Oishi said.
In Hawaii, coffee, macadamia and even nonedible koa trees represent some the $212 million worth of agriculture that bees make possible, according to the Apiary Program.
鈥淗oney bees contribute nearly $20 billion to the value of U.S. crop production,鈥 according to the .
鈥淪ome crops, including blueberries and cherries, are 90 percent dependent on honey bee pollination,鈥 the website said. 鈥淥ne crop, almonds, depends entirely on the honey bee for pollination at bloom time.鈥
A 鈥渂ig chunk鈥 of the almond industry gets its queens from Hawaii, Oishi said.
鈥淭hey are vital in providing the pollination services for crops throughout North America,鈥 he said.
None of that food is possible without queen bees.
Each honey bee colony has one queen that rules tens of thousands of female workers and a much smaller number of male 鈥渄rones鈥 that often live a brief, yet stimulating, life.
One queen can lay up to 2,000 eggs a day and live for several years. Eggs placed in 鈥渜ueen cups鈥 grow into larvae that are fed a protein-rich diet of 鈥渞oyal jelly鈥 that allows聽queens to become sexually mature, .
The high reproduction rate gives farmers a fighting chance at replacing honey bee populations threatened by pests and other environmental factors.
The Apiary Program estimates mainland beekeepers lose 30 percent of their colonies every year. To rebuild, many rely on Hawaii鈥檚 gentle European honey bees rather than mainland bees that have cross-bred with invasive African 鈥渒iller bees.鈥
The result of the cross-breeding on the mainland is Africanized hybrid bees that don鈥檛 produce as much honey, while their violent nature makes it more difficult to harvest the honey that is made, Oishi said.
Hawaii鈥檚 100-plus-year ban on imported bees helps ensure a supply of pure queen bees, but it hasn鈥檛 kept out all threats to local production.
Varroa mites, which first appeared on the Big Island in 2007 and later on Oahu, are the world鈥檚 most-devastating honey bee pest, according to the Department of Agriculture. Kauai, Maui, Molokai and Lanai remain free of varroa mites, which is why Big Island bees cannot be shipped to those islands.
Big Island beekeepers are 鈥渄oing a really good job鈥 of managing their hives, said Becky Azama, manager of the Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Plant Pest Control Branch, which oversees the Apiary Program.
Local queen bee production has the potential to grow beyond its current impact, she said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a viable industry,鈥 Azama said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what the limitations would be other than space.鈥
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About the Author
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Jason Armstrong has reported extensively for both of Hawaii Island鈥檚 daily newspapers. He was a public information officer/grant writer for the Hawaii County Department of Parks and Recreation from 2012 to 2016 and has lived in Hilo since 1987. Email Jason at jarmstrong@civilbeat.org