Okay, other guest, you have already posted enough racist comments on this website for the rest of your life. Don't you have anything else to do? Anyone else to annoy?
I'm going to need significantly more insight into the basis behind you making this claim. I'm certain some species are invasive and harmful, but I highly doubt all are, so this statement largely depends on where you're talking about, what species you're talking about, and what evidence you have that they are more harmful than beneficial to that given area
All invasive species are inherently harmful. The introduction of a new species into an area that hasn't evolved with said species, or its ancestors, for thousands of years is automatically harmful. For example, the honey bee provides unneccesary competition for the other pollinators. Yes, there were polinating insects before the bees came over.
Them having the potential to be harmful doesn't mean they are proportionally doing more damage than they are being beneficial to an area. Assuming you're talking about north America here as you've yet to list exactly where it is that they are invading. Honey is used for far more than just pollination. Aside from actively replacing pollinators, they provide food, cosmetic, and medicinal things as well. They are also preyed upon by other species, meaning they are part of the ecosystem, as opposed to being solely a burden on it (unlike, for example, the red lily beetle, which was introduced accidentally on imported lily flowers, whom feed upon the flowers, and have no natural predators actively seeking them out in these regions as of yet, or wild pigs, which are dangerous, overpopulate, have run hundreds of species to extinction, and are used more for sport than food).
All species were invasive at some point, but you've yet to provide substantial (to me) evidence that the honeybee in particular is more detrimental to an area to the point that area would be "better off without them".
Iirc, Japan actually tried to introduce the honeybee to their farms due to it being more efficient at pollination and producing honey, however, unlike the native bees, these honeybees had developed no proper defences against the Asian Giant Hornet, and couldn't survive the hive-invasions
Iirc, Japan actually tried to introduce the honeybee to their farms due to it being more efficient at pollination and producing honey, however, unlike the native bees, these honeybees had developed no proper defences against the Asian Giant Hornet, and couldn't survive the hive-invasions