Pōhutukawa leaves infected by myrtle rust. Credit: Department of Conservation, CC BY-NC-ND We know introduced honeybees as the ever-busy helpers of our gardens, farms and orchards. In pollinating crops and fertilizing fruit, they support more than a third of the food we eat and are worth billions of dollars to New Zealand's economy. But they could also be unwittingly helping one of the worst natural threats facing Aotearoa's native forests: myrtle rust . By collecting spores as food, then carrying them from plant to plant, honeybees may be under-appreciated vectors of this recently-arrived fungal disease. Our recently published research adds further weight to this idea, challenging the assumption that myrtle rust spreads mainly by wind alone. How myrtle rust hitches a ride Indigenous to Central and South America, myrtle rust was first detected in New Zealand in 2017. Since then, it has spread across much of the North Island and into parts of the South Island and the Chatham Islands.…