- theconversation.com How bees can monitor pollution for us – everything from toxic metals to antimicrobial resistance
Using bees as biomonitors can be a more sensitive and effective way of detecting contaminants than traditional sampling methods, new research shows.
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Is Beekeeping Wrong? Parasites and pesticides have brought chaos to bee colonies throughout the world. Natural beekeepers want to transform our relationship to the hive.
www.newyorker.com Is Beekeeping Wrong?Parasites and pesticides have brought chaos to bee colonies throughout the world. Natural beekeepers want to transform our relationship to the hive.
- www.sciencenews.org How geometry solves architectural problems for bees and wasps
Adding five - and seven - sided cells in pairs during nest building helps the colonyfit together differently sized hexa gonal cells , a new study shows.
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Little identification help please?
Edit:
Halictus scabiosae
, identified through observations.be with 99% certainty.What am I looking at? Except a very industrious little worker?
How do I go about figuring it out? Is there some reliable site that would allow me to refine by stripes and such? Thanks.
This is Wallonia, Belgium. I got a new camera, which allows me to get much more detailed entirely useless pictures! I was one with the bees for an entire hour, came home with 500 pictures, and this is the only photo I got of this one. The stripe pattern struck me, with the very sharp lines, but I have no head, no thorax, no nothing...
- www.livescience.com Where do honey bees come from? New study 'turns the standard picture on its head'
DNA analysis indicates the world's most common bee originated in northern Europe around 780,000 years ago, before spreading into East Africa and Arabia around 120,000 years later.
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Kamon Reynolds no longer affiliated with Hive Life conference, and now planning a separate conference
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
What do folks make of this news? I know a lot of U.S. (and some Canadian) beekeepers have really enjoyed the Hive Life conference in the past.
- phys.org Honey bees more faithful to their flower patches than bumble bees, new study shows
Honey bees are more faithful to their flower patches than bumble bees when it comes to returning to collect more pollen and nectar, according to a study by U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service scientists.
- time.com How the Tech Behind a COVID-19 Vaccine is Helping Save Bees
A biotechnology startup has developed a revolutionary new treatment for bee disease that could have wide applications for agriculture.
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Pollinator Interaction Databases
Hey folks, I found a few Pollinator Databases to share and would appreciate any more interaction databases or reference you guys use being thrown my way. :)
Global Bee Interaction Dataset
- https://github.com/seltmann/global-bee-interaction-data >This dataset comprises all bee interactions indexed by Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI; Poelen et al. 2014). It is published quarterly by the Big Bee Project (Seltmann et al. 2021) to summarize all available knowledge about bee interactions from natural history collection, and community science observations (i.e., iNaturalist), and the literature. Interactions include flower visitation, parasitic interactions (mite, viral), lecty, and many others.
UK DoPI - UK Database of Pollenator Interactions
- https://www.sussex.ac.uk/lifesci/ebe/dopi/ >The Database of Pollinator Interactions (DoPI) documents British pollinator-plant associations. DoPI unites the disparate publications currently scattered throughout the scientific literature with unpublished reports and databases into a single online depository.
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AP News: 48% of US honey bee colonies died last year
apnews.com Nearly half of US honeybee colonies died last year. Struggling beekeepers stabilize populationA new survey says America's honeybee hives just staggered through the second highest death rate on record, with beekeepers losing nearly half of their managed colonies.
This article has been circulating for a while, summarizing the latest BIP data on colony losses. Thought this forum might allow some beekeeper discussion of it. Do we think this annual "doom and gloom" reporting on BIP's colony loss survey data is useful, or does it sow pointless confusion among non-beekeepers?
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Carpenter bee visiting my Passionflower
Hi all, this little guy (or maybe big for a bee) was visiting my Passionflower today :)
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Adoption of meliponiculture in the domestic United States
Hello all,
With the threat of honeybee extinction looming on the horizon, I got to thinking that rearing stingless bees could eventually supplant apiculture for the production of high-value base materials used in the biomedical industry. Unfortunately, they don't produce much in the way of actual honey and the slow (re-)adoption of the practice has coincided with the loss of traditional knowledge and habitat destruction in Mesoamerica.
Despite many efforts to fund research programs around the world, interest in adopting meliponiculture here in North America seems next to nil. Perhaps there is a good reason behind it, but I suspect it's merely the product of ignorance and lack of funding sources.
With that said, has anyone heard or read anything that suggests the potential for (safely and lawfully) importing these little beauties into North America? Even if you don't know, I would love to hear everyone's thoughts and musings on meliponine bees anyways.
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Welcome! Are all subscribers here beekeepers? If so, whereabouts?
Or do you hope to keep bees? Or just think bees are neat?
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Caging queens to fight varroa - useful technique or needless sacrifice of productivity?
www.betterbee.com Using a Frame Isolation Cage in Varroa Management | BetterbeeHow to use a frame isolation cage to induce a brood break
This article was published recently and it seems like the method described could be useful or may just interrupt broodrearing so much that a colony wouldn't ever be able to thrive after being subjected to it. Who has tried any queen caging method like this before? Did it work for you?