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Requiem Bee for a

Brandon and Susan Pollard herd honeybees. “Urban bee-wrangling,” they call it. Beyond being honey purveyors, the Pollards, via their Texas Honeybee Guild, save residential colonies from extermination, offer public education on the importance of bees and rally on their little charges’ behalf as environmental activists. As the Pollards often attest, bees are responsible for about 30 percent of our food. They pollinate more than 100 species of fruits and vegetables. Without them, we are in trouble. And that’s where we are headed, they say. In recent years, bee populations have been crushed by insecticides, disease, parasites and the enigmatic colony collapse disorder, a phenomenon that has caused the mysterious and widespread disappearance of worker bees. Last year proved especially brutal for the Pollards and their bees: The couple estimates they lost 60 percent of their hives, often after city-backed trucks and planes sprayed swaths of Dallas with neurotoxin to combat disease-carrying mosquitoes, which incidentally also threatens the humble bee. With mosquito season upon us, the Pollards attempt to rebuild their colonies while bracing for another possible round of chemical warfare.

listening for life (Above) In Preston Hollow, Brandon Pollard listens with a stethescope for a feral hive in the walls of the Wischkowsky home. He says extracting the hives will be a mentally draining job. “The physical work — the cutting and the sawing — that’s easy, but the big-picture aspect of all that in an emotional sense is the hard part.” Pollard estimates a pest control service could fetch more than $1,000 to destroy the bees. “We could charge that,” he says, “but that’s not why we’re doing this. We’re not chasing money. We’re chasing the bees. And that’s why it’s hard. Because we want to do what’s best for them.” soothing smoke (Opening spread) Brandon and Susan Pollard, founders of the Texas Honeybee Guild, use a smoker while tending to hives at the John Bunker Sands Wetland Center just outside the city. Smoke sedates the insects, the beekeepers say, because they are hardwired to conserve energy for flight when they anticipate a hive fire. Bee smoking is an ancient practice — 15,000-year-old cave paintings show people sedating bees with smoke.

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