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  • 1

    Beekeeping in the TropicsBeekeeping in the TropicsDr. Peter RosenkranzUniversity of HohenheimApicultural State [email protected]/bienenkundeSS 2010

    Content

    1. What are Bees?2. Social Evolution in Bees: From Solitary to Eusociality3. Economic value of bees 4. Honey bee species of economic importance 5. General aspects of Pollination6. Honey hunting7. Specific traits of tropical honey bees8. Requirements for advanced Beekeeping Techniques9. Case study in North Eastern Brazil10. Specific problems:

    Plant protection Honey bee diseases

    11. Summary

  • 2

    Systematic of Bees

    Class InsectaOrder Hymenoptera AculeataFamily Apidae

    Stingless bees (Melipona spec.)Bumble bees (Bombus spec.)Honey bees (Apis spec.)

    Worldwide about 25.000 Bee speciesIn Germany about 600 Bee species (most of them solitary)In Brazil about 3.000 Bee species

    Tropics: higher biodiversity

    What are bees?Pecularities of Bees

    Use of Pollen and nectar for nutrition Visiting plants during foraging Social communities

  • 3

    Darwins enigma

    ... I will confine myself to one special difficultywhich at first appeared to me insuperable, and actually fatal to the whole theory (of evolution). I allude to the neuters or sterile females in insectcommunities

    C. Darwin, 1859

    How can sterile females be explainedwithin the framework of an evolutionarytheory based on survival of the fittest?

    In other words:

    Social Community and Evolution

    Darwins enigma

    C. Darwin, 1859

    This difficulty (of sterile workers), thoughappearing insuperable, is lessened, or, as I believe, disappears, when it is remembered that selectionmay be applied to the family, as well as to theindividual, and may thus gain the desired end

  • 4

    Social Evolution

    SolitaryEusocial

    CommunalSemisocial

    Eusocial Bees

    Overlap of generations Division of labor Occurrence of castes (reproductive and worker castes)

  • 5

    Scaptotrigona spec. in Brazil

    Eusocial Bees

    Stingless bees in Africa, South America and Australia

    Honey bees in Africa and Asia

    Apis mellifera in Ethiopia

    Apis dorsata in Asia (Giant Hone Bee) Apis florea in Asia

    Dwarf Honey Bee

    Original and today's distribution of Honey Bees (Apis) and Stingless Bees

    Honey bees

    Honey bees& Stingless bees

    Stingless bees

    Stingless bees

  • 6

    Honey bee species of the world(Honey bee = Apis)

    Apis mellifera *(Europe, Africa, Asia Minor)Apis cerana * (Asia)Apis koschevnikovi (Asia)Apis nicrocincta (Asia)Apis dorsata *(Asia)Apis laboriosa * (Asia)Apis florea (Asia)Apis andreniformis (Asia)* economic importance

    hive bees

    free buildingsingle combs

    Social organization of a Honeybee colony

    Males: Drones deriving from unfertilized eggs. The only task is mating with the queen.

    Female castes: Queen: reproduction Workers: all working tasks within in the colonyBoth derived from fertilized eggs, no genetic

    difference between workers and queens

  • 7

    Economic value of bees

    Products provided by Bees Honey Wax Pollen Propolis Royal Jelly Bee venom Pollination

    Economic value of bees

    Products provided by Bees Honey Wax Pollen Propolis Royal Jelly Bee venom Pollination

  • 8

    Economic value of bees

    Products provided by Bees Honey Honey bees, stingless bees Wax Honey bees Pollen Honey bees Propolis Honey bees Royal Jelly Honey bees Bee venom Honey bees Pollination Honey bees, stingless bees, solitary bees

    General Importanceof Bees

  • 9

    Pollination

    Wind, Water

    Bats

    Mammals

    Birds

    Pollination

  • 10

    Pollination

    InsectsAll Bees use pollen as the exclusive source of protein

    All Bees are Pollinators!

    Pollination by Bees

    1/3 of the agricultural production worldwide depends on pollination

    Economic value (estimated):

    - Worldwide: ~ 70 Billion (honeybees)

    - USA: ~ 40 Billion (bees in general, Morse 2001)

    Bees are the most effective pollinators among the insects. They perform about 50% of insect pollination.

    Agricultural BiodiversityInternational Initiative for the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Pollinators http://www.biodiv.org/programmes/areas/agro/pollinators.asp

  • 11

    Pollination

    Pollination Project at Jordan (Strawberry)

    Pollination: Global Ecology

    http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/LandCover/land_cover_3.html

  • 12

    Global EcologyCycle of Biomass

    CO2Photosynthesis

    Global EcologyPrimary Production (Biomass)

    ~ 100.000.000.000 t/ yeartropical rainforest ~ 60.000.000.000 t/yearCultivated area ~ 10.000.000.000 t/year

  • 13

    Global Ecology

    CO2Photosynthesis

    Pollination!

    Beekeeping with stingless bees

    Genus Melipona and Trigona

    Advantages Harmonious relationship between man and indigenous bees Including in Indian culture, for instance the Maya at Yucatan or the

    Yanomani at Amazonia Provision of pollen and honey for private use High prices Medical use?Disadvantages Relatively low honey yields (1 max. 10 kg/colony/year) Handling difficult, difficult for professional use Lack of knowledge on domestication and techniques of Meliponiculture

  • 14

    Honey Bee beekeeping(Apis spec.)

    Production of Honey and Bees Wax

    Honey hunting

    Honey hunting

    Apis dorsata (giant honey bee) in India

  • 15

    Natural nesting site of a honeybee colony(Togo, West Africa)

    Honey hunting

    Honey hunting

    Uganda: log hives

    Honey hunting

  • 16

    Traditional hivesEthiopia: Baskets as a bee hive and a Honey bee tree

    Honey hunting

    Asia: Apis dorsata, Apis cerana, Apis melliferaAfrica: Apis mellifera: African bee, the Cape honey beeSouth America: Apis mellifera: Africanized Honeybees (AHB)

    Tropical beekeeping

  • 17

    The eastern honey bee Apis cerana

    Apis cerana, the eastern Honey BeeSmall colonies, nervous bees

    Typical defense behaviour against giant hornets(Vespa manduca): balling and killing the hornet by heat

    Small scale Honey production with theeastern honey bee Apis cerana

    Apis cerana in India and extraction of a small honey harvest

  • 18

    Advanced Beekeepingwith the Western Honeybee

    Apis melliferain Europe

    Case study of a German Professional Beekeeper

    Organization, Management Technique!Example: Use of Rape

    Photos: Wolfgang Stckmann

  • 19

    Tropical Beekeeping(Apis mellifera)Specific traits of

    tropical honey bees

    1. High reproductive rates 2. Swarming and absconding3. Defensive behavior4. No winter cluster (population dynamic)

    Specific traits of tropical honey bees

  • 20

    High reproductive rate:Example of Africanized Honeybees (= tropical Honeybee)

    Spread of Africanized honeybees in South America

    Africanized honeybees in Brazil: By the use of swarm boxes the beekeeper can reach an equilibrium of loss and gain of swarms. Swarm boxes are also used to prevent establishing of swarms within cities.

    Swarming and absconding

  • 21

    Africanized honeybees in Brazil: Extreme swarming and absconding tendency

    Swarming and absconding

    Defensive behavior

    Beekeeping at Apicultural Institute of Hohenheim ..

  • 22

    Defensive behavior

    African bees and Africanized honeybees (Brazil): Lower threshold for defense behavior (a result of honey hunting in the

    tropics by man?) Long-lasting attacks (even several hours after disturbing the colony!) Attacks over a range of several hundreds meters around the hive Disturbed bees follow the beekeeper up to 2 km

    Intensive use of smoke, long-lasting defensive behavior of the bees of a disturbed colony (example of a professional beekeeper in Brazil)

    Defensive behavior

  • 23

    Keep colonies isolated and as single unit: Prevention of mutual disturbance and the use of poor food sources

    Defensive behavior

    Specific foraging strategy of African bees

    Foraging at night (Apis melliera adansoni in Togo)

    Use of poor food sources (Africanized Honey Bees in Brazil)

  • 24

    Population dynamic

    0

    10000

    20000

    30000

    40000

    10. M

    rz

    2. A

    pril

    26. A

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    17. M

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    19. J

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    6. A

    ug

    28. A

    ugus

    t

    20. S

    ept

    10. O

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    No. of bees/ broodcells

    BeesBrood cells

    Schwbische Alb 2001

    Seasonal course of colony development in temperate climates

    Worker bees

    Brood cells

    Seasonal course of colony development in tropical climates (Uruguay)

    05000

    10000150002000025000300003500040000

    29.10

    .1997

    21.11

    .1997

    11.12

    .1997

    30.12

    .1997

    21.01

    .1998

    19.02

    .1998

    15.03

    .1998

    17.04

    .1998

    11.05

    .1998

    05.06

    .1998

    05.07

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    11.08

    .1998

    11.09

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    num

    ber o

    f adu

    lt be

    es/ b

    rood

    ce worker brood

    drone brood

    bees

    Population dynamic

  • 25

    Winter cluster

    Requirements for a more advanced Tropical Beekeeping

    1. Suitable Bee hives2. Protected area for the apiary 3. Protection clothes: Gloves, Boots, masks, Smoker4. Devices for honey extraction and processing5. Possibilities for