Article

Dr Mark Goodwin

Position: Head of research, Plant & Food Research. Field: Honey bees and pollination.

For Dr Mark Goodwin, working with pollination has its challenges. Most crop plants only flower for a few weeks a year, so that’s all the time he’s got for experiments. If he wants to check something or try a new idea, he has to wait another year.

Dr Goodwin sets up a kiwifruit experiment with a camera outside

Kiwifruit experiment

Dr Mark Goodwin sets up a kiwifruit experiment.

Rights: The University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato

I get excited when I find out something nobody knew before or when I can change the way people think or do things.

During his work for a PhD in 1985–87, Mark found that previous guesswork about the pollination of kiwifruit, which was a new crop then, was wrong. People had noticed that honey bees didn’t visit flowers early in the morning. The idea grew that it was too cold for them, so hives were put on crates to raise them off the cold ground. Mark’s research found that kiwifruit flowers didn’t collect pollen before 9 am, which was why bees didn’t visit earlier. No more putting beehives on piles of crates!

Working with bees

View Dr Mark Goodwin of Plant & Food Research working with honey bees at an open hive, using smoke to calm them. Hear about some of things that Mark finds amazing and exciting about bees and learn some of the occupational hazards of working with stinging insects.

Rights: University of Waikato. All Rights Reserved.

Mark also suggested putting sugar syrup in beehives in kiwifruit orchards as a way to change the behaviour of the bees and increase pollination. Within a short time, this practice was taken up around New Zealand and abroad and continues today.

Mark also hopes to make a difference in the fight against American foulbrood, a bacterial disease of bees that kills whole colonies. If successful, New Zealand will become the first country to eradicate this disease. In 2015 Plant & Food Research produced this series of videos as a comprehensive guide to assist beekeepers in the eradication of American Foulbrood from New Zealand.

For Mark, life is about the birds as well as the bees. In his spare time, Mark is creating a book of photographs recording all the bird species found around Port Charles, near the tip of Coromandel Peninsula. By 2012 he had taken photos of 36 of the 38 birds known in the area, with just the crafty pheasant and the high-flying skylark to go and in 2017 he published Birds of Port Charles. This interest appeals to the scientist in Mark, as he has to understand the behaviour of the birds before he can catch them on camera.

Avariable oystercatcher on a beach.

Oystercatcher

Mark Goodwin took this photo of a variable oystercatcher as part of his project to photograph all the birds living around Port Charles, Coromandel.

Rights: Mark Goodwin

In June 2016 Mark received the inaugural Apiculture New Zealand Peter Molan Award in recognition for his research on bees. See here for more information from Pant & Food Research.

As of 2022 Mark is also running the NZ Honey Origin Project, a project which will involve catching thousands of bees to analyse the nectar they are collecting. The goal is to get a more accurate way to define New Zealand's – and potentially the World's – honey varieties.

Related content

Learn more about Dr Goodwin's work with pollination in these articles:

This article is based on information current in 2012 and 2023.

Published: 06 June 2012