There is a certain irony about the fact that our Wanganui Museum wants to exhibit a live, working beehive as part of its natural history programme.
The Honeybee (Apis melifera) as a distinct species was known to have pollinated flowering plants in return for nectar, 140 million years ago, alongside dinosaurs.
And yet, according to some researchers, we could be watching the end of them.
In America and Europe, vast areas of crops are threatened by the lack of honeybees for pollination.
Here in New Zealand we beekeepers are fighting a desperate battle to maintain our hives against the predations of the varroa mite, which slipped through our MAF security system a few years ago. Only a strict regime of controls using pesticides can keep the bees alive. Varroa has wiped out all the feral populations of honeybee, so the only viable colonies of honeybee are those kept by beekeepers.