"We need to manage our agriculture in a way that protects native bees and pollinating flies. We need to reduce the use of insecticides and provide some areas of unsprayed, uncultivated habitat with food and nesting sites in agricultural landscapes."
Australia is considered a big biosecurity threat for New Zealand beekeepers, largely due to the transport between both countries. However, in terms of countries with a similar climate, New Zealand could receive invasive species from a lot of places, Tylianakis said.
Australia has an aggressive bee called the Asian honeybee.
"The Asian honeybee is a very aggressive invader and can no longer be feasibly eradicated there," Tylianakis said. "Although it is named a honeybee, it is aggressive and almost unfarmable.
"Scarily, the first breach into Australia came as a hive in a yacht's mast, and, while it was found, Australia's luck ran out in Cairns in 2007. Now endemic in Queensland, if it came here to New Zealand it would be an environmental catastrophe."
New Zealand was recently invaded by the wool carder bee but fortunately it does not form large colonies. Tylianakis said it remained to be seen what impact the wool carder bee will have on native bees and plants.
"In contrast the Asian honeybee forms colonies which can move up to 10km from their nest sites. They aggressively protect their nest sites so could compete with bees. They're also a host of varroa, so they could serve as a vector for the mite. However, they're a primarily tropical species, so hopefully they wouldn't do so well here - unless climate change warms us up."