I don't see how you can reach that conclusion from your stated assertions. Correlation is not the same as causation. Bee populations in urban areas may be increasing, but that's because a lot of new beekeepers in towns and cities have taken it up as a hobby. (As a side effect of this, the cost of buying bees and equipment has rocketed.) Hive deaths are occurring on a fairly large scale in both towns and the countryside. As recently as a winter or two ago, one in three colonies didn't make it through the winter. Varroa probably plays a major role here, but there's been encouraging research done recently to tackle this awful disease at a genetic level.Aurora wrote:Bee populations are currently thriving in urban environments.
IMO, this suggests that the liberal use of pesticides in rural areas is largely responsible for the dramatic decline in numbers.
The liberal use of pesticides may be a bad thing for many reasons, but it's not been proven to be a definitive agent in the widespread deaths of bees in the last few years.