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Anthropocene Crisis: Climate Change, Pollinators, and Food Security

Journal

ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/environments6020022

Keywords

pollinators; Anthropocene; climate change; food security; community

Funding

  1. Social Sciences and Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) [435-2014-1233]
  2. Wilfrid Laurier University
  3. Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems

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In this paper, we propose a new approachunderstood as a whole-of-community approachto address a dualistic and dysfunctional human/nature relationship. Of particular concern is the decline in health and numbers of the insects that pollinate an estimated 90 percent of the Earth's flora and an estimated 35 percent of global crop volume. Specifically, bees provide the majority of biotic pollination and play a critical role in food crop pollination. Multiple factors are contributing to this growing problem including a changing climate. In 2016, the International Commission on Stratigraphy agreed that the concept of the Anthropocenethe human epochis of sufficient scale to be considered part of the geological time scale. This indicates that these crises are not random or passivethey are largely the direct result of human activities. Despite decades of awareness of these socio-ecological issues, they continue to worsen. In addition, the growing awareness of the critical role of pollinators is creating a new understanding of our interconnectedness with the natural world. We introduce the Bee City movement as a way to operationalize a whole-of-community approach. Individual action is critical, but addressing pollinator health in these forums legitimizes and provides an institutional space for otherwise fringe, or even marginalized, activities and more coherent spaces for habitat creation.

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