Bumblebee needs protection for humans’ sake

At the current rate, the rusty patched bumblebee is expected to be extinct within a few years.

In January, before President Barack Obama left office, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service scheduled the rusty patched bumblebee to be listed on the endangered species list on Feb. 10 — and with good reason.

The population of rusty patched bumblebees, which used to be abundant in 28 states, has suffered a devastating decline of nearly 90 percent over two decades. At the current rate of decline, it is expected to be extinct within a few years.

There’s no underestimating the importance of bumblebees to the natural order. While their busyness doesn’t yield honey for your tea and toast, the nest-dwelling fuzzy pollinators are vital to the process that produces fruit, seeds and nuts.

On Feb. 9, the day before the bees were to be officially protected under under the Endangered Species Act, the Trump administration temporarily froze all new federal regulations. The rusty patched bumblebee’s status was suddenly thrown into limbo at a time when protections are needed most.

As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump vowed to freeze all new regulations and order a thorough review of environmental regulations. He insisted that regulations put American business at a competitive disadvantage.

The Natural Resources Defense Council sued the Trump administration in federal court for delaying the bumblebee’s listing as an endangered species, arguing that it was a violation of the law.

Fortunately, the administration reversed its position and is allowing the rusty patched bumblebee to be listed. This will mean bee habitats and the dwindling number of places they can be found can be protected from companies and individuals that would harm them.

This could not have been an easy call for an administration taking a skeptical look at environmental regulations, but it is the right call. It wouldn’t have only been a species of bumblebee that felt the sting of extinction. It would’ve been everyone dependent on the fruits of the bees’ labor as well.