Here’s how many bees you’re killing with your car — and why that’s dangerous for the environment

· New York Post

Bee-ware.

New research finds that millions upon millions of bees are killed in collisions with cars in the United States annually — posing a major problem for the economy and environment, experts insisted in a buzzy new report.

The study, published in the journal Sustainable Environment, was conducted in Utah using sticky traps fixed to the bumpers of mid-sized cars — that were then driven at length around The Beehive State.

Researchers modified cars to contain sticky traps to catch bees as they drove. Courtesy of Joseph S. Wilson

During 29 different drives on a mix of road types, researchers logged 58,000 miles under various conditions, causing considerable carnage, researchers said.

“We estimate that hundreds of millions [of] bees could be killed every summer, just considering the roads on which we conducted our surveys,” they wrote.

Researchers said cars are striking millions of bees. Courtesy of Joseph S. Wilson

Just one 230-mile trip from Salt Lake City to Moab could claim up to 175 lives, they revealed.

Local transportation data estimated about 94,000 cars travel that route daily. The team speculated the bees’ true casualty number is much higher.

“Regardless of what the number is — if it’s millions or billions — it’s a large number of bees that are being impacted,” author Joseph Wilson told Sciencenews.org.

“My gut says we’re likely underestimating, because every time I drove, I hit at least one bee.”

Reed Johnson, a researcher in Ohio State’s Department of Entomology with no affiliation to the new data, has warned for years that bee populations are at serious risk.

Losing so many winged insects — he said bees are the most important pollinators around — will sting worse than we imagine.

Johnson explained that bees pollinate about a third of the world’s food supply and their natural services are valued at nearly $20 billion annually.

He also noted that the populations are “declining at a rapid, unprecedented rate.”

Researchers noted that they struck at least one bee during each experimental drive. justoomm – stock.adobe.com

Commercial honeybee colony losses have been reported with an average dropping rate of around 30% each winter for almost two decades. The bee expert also explained that the number once was closer to 10%.

Wilson’s paper also noted there may be a way to mitigate the damage. Citing similar reports, bees often avoid crossing roads if no vegetation grows from its median.

Planting on the sides of roads rather than in the middle may save them from a one-way ticket to the big flower in the sky.