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VP residence buzzing with new beehive

The Naval Observatory was abuzz Tuesday morning as second lady Karen Pence unveiled a new beehive at the vice president's residence.

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Betsy Klein (CNN)

The Naval Observatory was abuzz Tuesday morning as second lady Karen Pence unveiled a new beehive at the vice president's residence.

"I know honeybees and the critical role they play in our country's agriculture is just as important to you as it is to me," she said to a small crowd of invited bee-list guests, including representatives from the American Beekeeping Federation, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and the Almond Board (almond trees are very dependent on honey bees for cross-pollination).

The second lady, who first kept bees at the Indiana Governor's Mansion, knowledgeably rattled off a long list of bee facts.

"One out of three bites of food taken in this country are made possible with the help of pollinators," Pence noted, adding that pollinators like bees, bats, and birds add at least $15 billion in crop value per year.

"I mean, I've learned so much about bees in the last four years," she waxed.

But the bee population is in danger: the number of hives in the US has dropped from 6 million in the 1940s to about 2.5 million today, per the office of the second lady. Pence attributed that stinging decline to a syndrome called Colony Collapse Disorder, as well as stress caused by factors such as parasites, pests, transportation and poor nutrition.

While there are many causes for the bee decline, climate change may also play a role in the changing population.

"Changes to the habitat where bees forage" can be a factor, per the Environmental Protection Agency's website. The new hive was installed less than one week after President Donald Trump began the process to pull out of the Paris climate agreement, which takes steps to curb global warming.

Pence implored Americans to take steps to help rebuild the bee population, from building a hive to planting bee-friendly flowers, herbs and vegetables to setting up a birdbath.

She made a beeline to the new triple-deep "Langstroth" hive, kicking off her high heels and walking barefoot in the grass alongside her guests.

The 15,000-20,000 busy bees in the vice president's backyard will produce honey, which will be harvested, bottled and given away, per Pence, who also touted the health benefits of honey in combating seasonal allergies. The bees join a menagerie of Pence pets, including bunny Marlon Bundo, and cats Pickle and Oreo.

The agriculture secretary proclaimed the third week of June "National Pollinator Week."

"I'm proud to know that the USDA is on the cutting edge of helping to resolve the decline in beehive population across the country," Perdue said, highlighting his department's research on the issue and National Pollinator Health Strategy work with the EPA.

Pence's bees aren't the only hive buzzing in the Trump administration. Former first lady Michelle Obama installed a beehive in the White House kitchen garden in 2009, which is still home to about 70,000 bees.

First lady Melania Trump is committed to carrying on the White House garden tradition, beehive and all, acting senior adviser Stephanie Winston Wolkoff told CNN in February.

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