Northwest Iowa Legislator Wants Honeybee As Iowa’s Official Insect

bee 1Des Moines, Iowa — A northwest Iowa lawmaker is one of the sponsors of legislation that would give state recognition for something that can both sting and sweeten our lives.

Legislation that would name the honeybee the “official state insect of Iowa” is ready for debate in a House committee.

That’s Representative John Wills of Spirit Lake, a co-sponsor of the move.

Wills says honeybees play a key role in our food supply and the work of these flying pollinators is worth 92 million dollars to the state’s economy.

There are about 15-hundred beekeepers in Iowa. Three million pounds of honey is produced in Iowa each year. This proposal to designate the honeybee as the official state insect is far from a done deal. It’s only cleared the first of AT LEAST six hurdles in the legislative process. The channel catfish never got that far in previous years when a group of legislators tried to name it the official state fish. And Wills failed two years ago to get his fellow lawmakers to designate an official state soil.

There’s another piece of legislation floating around the House that would name the “regal fritillary” as the official state butterfly. It can be found in tall prairie grass and wetlands, but has become rare. Long ago, state officials designated the oak as the official state tree, the goldfinch as the official state bird and the geode is the official state rock. The official state flower is the wild rose.

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