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CT’s commercial beekeepers face record hive losses as honeybee populations plummet nationwide

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CT’s commercial beekeepers face record hive losses as honeybee populations plummet nationwide


Beekeeper Lauren Doninger, owner of Yellow House Honey, is holding a frame of honeybees in front of bee hives in her backyard in Hamden on October 16, 2025. 

Arnold Gold/Hearst Connecticut Media

Rollie Hannan Jr. has been beekeeping for more than three decades, building Honey Meadows Farm in Southbury into one of Connecticut’s largest commercial apiaries, with more than 400 hives.

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But he has never seen a season quite like this one.

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Hannan said he lost about 90% of his hives this year — some of the steepest losses he has ever faced in a business familiar with setbacks.

Honeybee populations have been steadily declining over the past two decades, besieged by pesticides, parasites and a loss of wild habitat, experts say. This past year, studies show, has been especially tough for the nation’s commercial beekeepers — including Hannan and a few others in Connecticut — whose hives pollinate the orchards, berry farms and vegetable fields that feed the region.

Beekeepers and experts say they are not alarmed yet — honeybee populations often fluctuate and the industry has weathered sharp declines before. But if losses continue at this rate, they warn, the economic strain could push more commercial farmers to abandon their hives and threaten the crops that depend on their pollination.

Preliminary data from the latest U.S. Beekeeping Survey shows that from April 2024 to April 2025, beekeepers nationwide lost more than half their colonies — the highest decline rate in the survey’s 14-year history. Average annual losses have typically hovered at about 41%.

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The losses were even more dire in Connecticut, where nearly 67% of colonies disappeared during that span, the highest on the East Coast, according to the survey.

“Overall, these results suggest that annual colony loss rates continue to rise, placing growing pressure on the beekeeping industry to maintain the national honeybee population at a stable level,” the study notes. “This ongoing trend presents an increasing challenge to meeting the demand for crop pollination and honey production in the U.S.”

Die-offs are a routine part of raising honeybees. Connecticut beekeepers typically lose about 40% of their colonies each year, said Bill Hesbach, president of the Connecticut Beekeepers Association. Hannan said his annual losses are about 50% to 60% across his three apiaries, two of which are out of state.

The Beekeeping Survey’s 70% loss rate for Connecticut is inflated, Hesbach said, estimating the figure is closer to 45% — less severe but still “significant.” Most of Connecticut’s beekeepers are backyard hobbyists whose losses matched previous years, but some commercial apiaries lost a “tremendous amount of hives,” he added. 

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“You can look at (bees) like a crop,” Hesbach said. “Most of the time, in the long run, that crop will average out its yield and its losses. But there’s going to be years when there’s tremendous losses and very despondent beekeepers.”

Across the country, honeybees pollinate about 100 commercial crops and, along with other pollinators, including bumblebees, butterflies and hummingbirds, are responsible for about a third of all food and beverages.

First disappearance of honeybees

Honeybees first began disappearing in large numbers in about 2006 and 2007 — a mystery that became known as “colony collapse disorder.” The decline was likely driven by pesticide exposure, parasites and a loss of wildflowers, said Sarah Lawson, an assistant biology professor at Quinnipiac University.

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Since then, honeybee populations have rebounded slightly as farmers began treating for mites and planting more floral habitats. But overall, Lawson said, bees are still in decline because the “root causes” that drove the the first wave of colony collapses “were never really addressed.”

Pesticides remain “one of the big drivers” of today’s losses, Lawson said. Chemicals such as neonicotinoids can impair bees’ memory and navigation, leaving them unable to find their way back to their hives. Other dangers include overdevelopment, which wipes out valuable foraging areas, and harmful pests that attack colonies, like the virus-spreading Varroa mite and bears, whose numbers have been increasing in Connecticut.

This year’s losses made the initial colony collapses “look like nothing,” Hannan said. He first blamed pesticides used by local orchards, then acknowledged it was likely a mix of problems. “It’s hard to pinpoint one,” he said. “You get one stressor in there, and then something else happens and then it’s harder to keep them alive.”

Hannan grew up on a small farm in Southbury where his family raised sheep and cattle. He discovered beekeeping in high school, liking that it gave him a chance to be outdoors and “do something different than most people.” He also enjoys seeing how bees interact with one another.

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Every year, Hannan trucks his hives to fields and orchards across the state to pollinate pears, apples, blueberries, strawberries, summer squash, winter squash and pumpkins. He earns $90 to $120 per colony, depending on the crop.

Commercial beekeeping rarely turns a profit, and many years, Hannan said he’s just hoping to break even. Losing so many colonies brings even greater economic strain, as he must replace his bees by buying hives from other keepers.

The many challenges, coupled with the minimal payoff, has discouraged young farmers from trying their hand at beekeeping, Hannan said. He jokes with his 14-year-old son that he’s probably better off not entering the business.

For those who do join, big colony losses are inevitable — and the reasons aren’t always clear.

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“If you don’t get hit one year, don’t get cocky because you’re going to get hit the next,” Hannan said. “I’ve seen it happen to a lot of good beekeepers, where they’re third or fourth generation and they’re still scratching their head because they don’t know what happened.”

Die-offs vary in state 

Many of the state’s backyard beekeepers managed to avoid the worst of this year’s die-offs.

Lauren Doninger, who runs Yellow House Honey in Hamden, said all 10 to 12 of her colonies survived this past year. She regularly sees a 100% survival rate.

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Still, Doninger said she has noticed changes. She usually receives about eight or nine calls every year to collect bee swarms from yards. Swarming involves a large group of bees splitting off to form new hives, a healthy sign of reproduction.

This past year, Doninger said she got only one swarm call. Her theory is that “because so many fewer bees survives over winter, there were fewer colonies available to swarm.”

The loss of honeybees has spurred conservation efforts across Connecticut. Several municipalities, including Bridgeport and New Milford and West Hartford, have adopted pesticide-free practices and pollinator-friendly planting. So have the University of Connecticut and Quinnipiac University, which are both affiliated with the Bee Campus USA program. Some have enrolled in beekeeping classes. Others have started pollinator gardens and bee highways. 

This year, Connecticut also passed a law banning the use of neonicotinoids on lawns, golf courses and other turf areas — a major win for environmental advocates who had spent years pushing for those restrictions. The law will take effect in 2027.

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Connecticut is home to nearly 400 bee species, and some, such as bumblebees, are also struggling. Lawson said she was especially concerned about these wild species because they don’t have beekeepers managing them the way honeybees do.

“I think we need to be more careful about how we’re using our pesticides and using a precautionary principle going forward instead of releasing the pesticides and seeing what happens,” Lawson said.

New defenses against harmful pests are also giving beekeepers hope. The Environmental Protection Agency recently approved Norroa, an RNA-based treatment for Varroa mites that Connecticut and a dozen other states have already adopted, Hesbach said. The treatment gives beekeepers a new tool in the decades-long fight against the parasites.

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Despite the overwhelming losses, Hannan said he isn’t giving up. He’s rebuilding his colonies for next season, hoping it won’t be as devastating. “I started when I was 15 and I’m 51 now,” he said. “So what do I have left?”



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Connecticut’s Murphy: Greenland Is a Distraction

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Connecticut’s Murphy: Greenland Is a Distraction


Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy said Sunday that if President Trump acts on his desire to “annex Greenland,” that would end the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He also suggested the whole Greenland issue was an unnecessary distraction.

“It would be the end of NATO,” the Democrat told NBC’s Meet the Press. “NATO would have an obligation to defend Greenland.” That, he suggested, would pit the U.S. against its NATO peers.

Murphy said the larger issue is that the president is “spending every single day thinking about invading Greenland, managing the Venezuelan economy, building a ballroom.” That takes time away from addressing healthcare and affordability issues, he said.



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Chock, Bates win record-setting seventh U.S. Figure Skating title ahead of Milan

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Chock, Bates win record-setting seventh U.S. Figure Skating title ahead of Milan


Madison Chock and Evan Bates danced their way to a record-setting seventh U.S. Figure Skating title on Saturday night, showcasing their trademark creativity, athleticism and precision in their final competition before the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Now, the countdown is on for the moment they have waited for the past four years.

“We like to build momentum through the season,” Bates said, “and it’s a great feeling going into a big event knowing you skated well the previous event. So we’re going to roll with that momentum into Milan.”

Chock and Bates have dominated ice dance ever since they finished fourth at the Beijing Games, arguably the most disappointing and frustrating placement for any Olympian. They have won the past three world titles, the past three gold medals at the Grand Prix Final, and they have nobody within sight of them when it comes to competing against fellow Americans.

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Performing a flamenco-styled dance to a version of the Rolling Stones hit “Paint It Black” from the dystopian sci-fi Western drama “Westworld,” Chock and Bates produced a season-best free skate inside Enterprise Center and finished with 228.87 points.

Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik were second with 213.65 points and Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko were third with 206.95, making those two pairs the likely choices to join Chock and Bates on the American squad for the Winter Games.

There wasn’t much drama in the dance competition.

At least for the top step.

Yet sometimes the winning programs aren’t necessarily the ones that win over the crowd. And while Oona Brown and Gage Brown only finished fifth, the sister-brother duo — former world junior champions — earned the first standing ovation of the night for their moody, creative and almost cinematic program set to selections from the film “The Godfather.”

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“I think that was one of the best — if not the best — performances we’ve had,” Gage Brown said afterward.

The Browns ended a stretch in which several couples taking the ice made some kind of significant mistake, whether it was a skater stumbling to the ice, someone getting out of synch with their twizzles, or some other calamitous misfortune.

Then it was a parade of near-perfect programs, each couple trying to upstage the previous one.

Emily Bratti and Ian Somerville were the first to knock the Brown siblings from first place, then reigning bronze medalists Caroline Green and Michael Parsons took over first place with their program, set to “Escalate” by Tsar B and “Son of Nyx” by Hozier.

Carreira and Ponomarenko, the U.S. silver medalists the past two years, knew a podium spot would probably earn them a spot on the Olympic team when they took the ice. And they delivered with a sharp program in which they seemed to channel the feeling and the characters from the 2006 psychological thriller film “Perfume: The Story of a Murder.”

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“We had a bit of a rocky start to this season,” said Carreira, who was born in Canada but receiver her U.S. citizenship in November, making her eligible to compete at the Olympics. “I’m happy we got our act together and delivered a good performance here.”

It wound up being good enough for bronze.

That’s because the 23-year-old Zingas, who made the difficult witch from singles to dance about four years ago, and the 24-year-old Kolesnik quickly assumed the top spot with a program set to music by Sergei Prokofiev from the ballet of “Romeo and Juliet.”

“It hasn’t been an easy journey,” Zingas said, “and I think our unique approach to this season, and our unique style on the ice, really helped us, and it’s really an emotional moment to be sitting here.”

Zingas and Kolesnik only held the top spot for about four minutes — the length of the free skate by Chock and Bates.

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It almost seemed to be a forgone conclusion that they would win Saturday night. But the real pressure now begins: Chock and Bates finished eighth at the 2014 Olympics, ninth four years later, and came in fourth at the Winter Games in 2022.

Yes, they helped the Americans win team gold in Beijing, but even that was somewhat tainted. They never got a medal ceremony there because of a long investigation into Russian doping, which pushed their presentation all the way to the 2024 Summer Games.

They would love to help the U.S. win another team gold. But their target is unquestionably the ice dance title itself.

“It’s going to be a lot more of what it has been — we know what to do, we have our plan and we’re executing,” Chock said. “We don’t plan on deviating from it. We’re going to stick to it. Trust ourselves, trust our team and do what we know to do.”

My New Favorite Olympian will introduce you to Team USA’s most inspiring athletes and the causes they champion. New episodes hosted by Olympic figure skating medalist Adam Rippon and NBC’s Chase Cain will drop January 15. And don’t miss My New Favorite Paralympian beginning March 5!

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Dog found dead in Willimantic River

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Dog found dead in Willimantic River


A dog was found dead on the ice in the Willimantic River on Friday, according to the Willimantic Police Department.

The Windham Animal Control was notified after a report of a small dog lying motionless near the center of the river close to the waterfall.

Emergency personnel responded and found that the dog was already dead and had been laying on a cardboard box on unstable ice.

While the police and fire department worked to create a plan to rescue the dog, the ice broke apart, and the dog was carried downstream.

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It is still unknown how the dog ended up in the river, and what the causes of death were.

Animal control and the Willimantic Police Department are currently investigating the incident and are looking to find out who was involved and how the dog entered the water.

Anyone with information can call the police department at 860-465-3135.



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