you damn well better care about honeybees as the decline in the honeybee population affects all of the fruits and vegetables you eat!! Honeybees are one, of an important few, pollinators of plant life. This life on Earth is all a careful balance and we are incredibly short sighted when we don't use that understanding when making choices about what we eat and how we live our life.
“…This transfer of pollen from one part of a flower to another may be accomplished in several different ways, but in most orchard situations the primary agents of transfer are bees, especially honey bees… … If these conditions are not met satisfactorily or if pollen is not transferred between blossoms, little or no fruit will be set. Furthermore, insufficient pollen transfer can lead to poor fertilization of ovules, non-symmetrical fruit, and high rates of fruit drop. Many of these problems can be avoided by placing honey bee colonies in the orchard during the bloom period. The proper use and placement of honey bee colonies will help insure maximum benefits.”
http://www.virginiafruit.ento.vt.edu/bees.html"For instance, the state's $45 million apple crop -- the fourth largest in the country -- is completely dependent on insects for pollination, and 90 percent of that pollination comes from honey bees," Frazier says. "So the value of honey bee pollination to apples is about $40 million."
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/04/070422190612.htm"Most insects tirelessly perform functions that improve our environment and lives in ways that scientists are only beginning to understand," explains entomologist John Losey of Cornell University. "Don't let the insects' small stature fool you, these minute marvels provide valuable services."
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=insects-provide-billions“From this information, we see that if we are to continue with current agricultural practices, we will increasingly rely upon the honeybee to pollinate our crops and if people continue to eat honey, beekeepers will keep on selling honey. Although bees could be managed strictly for their pollinating ability without using their honey, this system could affect agricultural costs. How does the bee fit into this situation? Managed bees may be more likely to avoid the pesticides, mites, and disruption of their homes that typically threaten native bees. However, one reason the managed bees have a better survival rate than the native bees is that humans have interfered with the natural habitat of the native bees through the use of pesticides, forest clear-cutting, accidental introduction of parasites, and mono-agriculture. Although honey production may have been the initial reason for the importation of honeybees to America, it is no longer the sole reason that these bees are important to humans. The use of managed bees may be the only way modern agriculture can sustain itself. The question remains as to whether we could practically reintroduce a more "natural" system of pollination into our modern society.”
http://www.vrg.org/journal/vj96nov/bee.htm