Comment by bregma
12 hours ago
There's not as much crossover as you might think. In North America the native pollinators are adapted to the native plants and can't even pollinate the introduced eurasian ones. And it goes the other way: honeybees can't pollinate the native plants, only the introduced eurasian ones.
If course, if you're in Europe, honeybees are the native pollinators. At least around the Mediterranean.
While I haven't done an intense study of it, I very frequently see multiple bee species, natives and honey bees, on the same flowers. This includes things like raspberries, mint, dandelions, various fruit blossoms, as well as vegetables. I'm sure there is specialization in at least some of the natives, but some of them, the bumblebees especially (or maybe that's just because they are bigger and easier to see), seem to be pretty generalist foragers much like the honey bees
So, what you're saying is that honeybees are facilitating the spread of invasive plants in North America? Seems like a definite negative.
Those ships have literally sailed, centuries ago.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbian_exchange
Invasives are an ongoing and escalating problem.
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See also earthworms facilitating spread of invasives:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasive_earthworms_of_North_A...
We also have many wild bees in Europe.