Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

In #aboutthebees history hives honey Scott

A History of Honey

Image result for honey
The history shared by humans and bees begin back in the mesolithic, the Middle Stone Age, some 10,000 years ago. From the first evidence of foraging from bee hives, people's relationships with bees around the world developed, leading to the construction and use of containers to house hive and farm bees to people's convenience as early as 9,000 years ago. The farming materials gained from this foraging and farming of bees  honey, wax, royal jelly, and propolysis  provided nutritional, medicinal, cultural, and manufacturing benefits. Around the world, cultures, sometimes independently, incorporated bees and beekeeping into their societies and cultures, often incorporating them into mythology.


8,000 year-old Spanish cave painting depicting bee hive foraging.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beekeeping#/media/File:Cueva_arana.svg

In Egypt, honey bees held great importance in their culture. Among the first to practice large scale beekeeping rather than foraging of natural hives, Egypt has a long and developed relationship with bees. Honey was used for everything from sweetening food to paying taxes and preventing infection. Embalming bodies utilized both honey and beeswax, which was also valued for its use in candles and cosmetics. Less well known bee products like royal jelly and propolis also have a history of medical use in ancient Egypt to prevent infection. Bees also played an important role in Egpytian monarchy. The symbols of the kings of Upper and Lower Egypt were a reed and honey bee respectively. Honeybee products played an important role in religious proceedings, with sacred animals being fed honey cakes, sarcophagi being sealed with beeswax after the body was embalmed in honey, jars of honey were sealed with entombed kings and queens among the many other treasures stored. Even in mythology, a translated Egyptian text states that when the sun god Re cries, his tears become bees upon landing.


Egyptian hieroglyphs from the Sun temple of Nyuserre, an Egyptian pharaoh.These 4,500 year old hieroglyphs depict an individual on the left blowing smoke into an apiary while in the centre and right, people are storing collected honey. https://lithub.com/who-were-the-geniuses-who-first-domesticated-the-wild-honey-bee/

In the Americas too, despite the lack of honey bees, many bees were still kept and cultivated for their honey. From Mexico down to Brazil, several species of stingless bees were kept for their honey production. The Aztec, Maya, and many Brazilian civilizations have been found to have practiced beekeeping for thousands of years. The variety of stingless bees cultivated in the Americas do not produce as much honey as the honey bees of Africa, Europe, and Asia, but their cultural and economic importance could still be seen. In the Aztec empire, along with being used as a sweetener and medicine, this honey found use as a way to pay tribute and, after colonization by the Spanish, a way to pay tax. Mythologically, bees in Aztec civilization were represented in Ah-Mucen-Cab, the god of bees and honey, depictions of which have been found in temples. Books describing the Maya also feature illustrations of gods collecting honey and describe rituals surrounding beekeeping.


Aztec incense vessel depicting Ah-Mucen-Cab and an Aztec apiary. http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/merida-museum-2.htm

A History of Hives

As time progressed, the ways bees were kept changed. Initially, the first apiaries were simply pottery and baskets that bees happened to build hives in. Following this, Egyptians began using stacked, horizontal tubes of dried mud. The honeycombs from these tubes would be collected, crushed, and placed in a container in the sun, causing the wax to melt and separate from the honey so that both cold be collected separately. The beeswax would float and in effect, seal the honey in the pot until later. Often, these pots would have spouts at the base from which honey could be poured without disturbing the wax.

Wall of tube beehives in Egypt.

Later, clay came to replace mud in these hive as their use spread through the eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. In China, wooden boxes began being used to provide spaces for bees to build their hives, while in western Europe, Skeps began to be weaved. These skeps were effectively upturned woven baskets of straw and grass which provided space for bees to build hives. However, these hives could not be inspected for health and to harvest them would require killing the hive. Later skeps began using a second basket that would separate the skep in two, allowing honey to be collected with less damage to the hive.

Image result for bee skep

Modern apiaries with removable frames began to be developed in the 1700s and become commonly used through the 1800s. These apiaries feature boxes containing frames we’re familiar with and utilize supers (modular boxes of frames) and queen excluders to ensure harvested frames contain only honey.

Langstroth Hive Parts
Langstroth-syle modern apiary.

A Blast from the Past!

Though they have been used as far back as the 1600s, top bar hives have been making a resurgence in the last 50 years. These apiaries do not use frames. Rather, they only have multiple bars laid across an open box horizontally. The bees will then build their combs off these bars where they can then be harvested. This is a less expensive alternative to modern apiaries and also allows aesthetically pleasing combs to be harvested whole.

A bar of a top bar hive and the comb built off it.

From the Stone Age to the digital age, people around the world have been using honey. An early sweetener and with many medicinal properties, honey and the bees that make them found their way into many cultures and their goods, into many cultural practices as well as more mundane uses. Over the centuries and millennia, bees have been kept and raised in a wide variety of containers and methods, developing into the modern apiculture of today, with modular hives designed to ensure honey made in these hives is as pure as possible. All thanks to some people who left pottery out and the bees that decided to make it their home.

References


- Scott B.

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In #aboutthebees ancient bees history Scott

A History of Bees


Bees, both wild and farmed, are a wonderful and essential component of modern ecosystems and economies. But how did this useful little insect come to be? Today there are over 16,000 species of bees throughout the world, all of which originated from an ancestor in the distant past which has proliferated and spread throughout the world. What was this ancestor? Where did they spread from? And how have they shaped the world we know today?


Bees and Flowers: Best Friends from the Beginning

Like many pollinating insects, bees have their origins deeply connected to the evolution of flowering plants in the mid Cretaceous. Over 100 million years ago, flowering plants began to spread across the cretaceous world, toppling non-flowering plants as the most prevalent terrestrial plant species and opening up new opportunities for whatever organisms could utilize these new plants. One such organism was a carnivorous wasp-like insect that fed on pollen-eating insects that were emerging at the time. This new species began to adapt to use this new food source, directly eating pollen itself. However, these new pollen eaters were still solitary like most modern bee species, It wasn't until tens of millions of years later that the first eusocial bees (bees that live together in social systems with labour division) appeared.

As flowering plants established themselves as the dominant terrestrial plants and their connection and interdependence with pollinators such as bees grew, the ancestor of modern bees began specializing in pollination as a lifestyle. Their diets developed to become dependent on the pollen and nectar of these plants and the pollination of specific plants. This coevolution (evolution resulting from complimentary pressures two closely-involved species place on each other) helped drive the diversification of both flowering plants and bees. Genetic evidence suggests that it was this coevolution with flowering plants that spurred the explosion of diversity of bees, which have remained diverse and prominent to this day.


Unlikely Cousins



Coming from a shared ancestral species, bees split off from wasps through their coevolution with flowering plants; their lifestyle shifting away from predation and parasitism to mutualism in the form of pollination. But, bees themselves wouldn't stay unified for long. The early wasp-like ancestor of bees, soon after differentiating from wasps, had ants differentiate from them. This new family of insects found a different way of life in its environment, doing away with only feeding on pollen and nectar, becoming entirely eusocial, and growing wings in only special circumstances. Bees and ants, despite their differences, are more closely related to each other than either of them are to wasps.


Where Did Honey Bees Come From?

There are seven species of honey bee found throughout the world, but only one, Apis mellifera, the European honey bee, is farmed and cultivated around the world. Its native range reaches from northwestern Africa, through Europe, and into western Asia. Within this area, dozens of subspecies exist. However, six more honey bee species are found throughout Africa, Europe, and Asia and thousands of non-honey bees around the world. This begs the question of where the common ancestor of these honey bees came from?


The current range of honey bees. (Obtained from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honey_bee)

Originally, it was thought that the ancestor of honey bees originated in Africa. However, as of 2014, new genetic evidence suggests that honey bees originated in Asia, where they then expanded and diversified to the rest of the world. The European honey bee we're all familiar with split from its cousin Apis ceranae, the Asian honey bee, only 6 to 9 million years ago in southeast Asia, where  it then diverged into the 32 known subspecies today. Since being farmed, humans have spread these bees throughout the world.


The Marks of Coevolution


(Obtained from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ophrys_apifera)

The hundred twenty million year-long coevolution between flowering plants and bees can be seen to this day. Ophrys apifera, the bee orchid, is a flower found throughout the Mediterranean and surrounding area, reaching as north as Ireland. This orchid has evolved to look similar to a bee, and in its southern ranges solitary bees of the Eucera genus attempt to mate with the artificial bee, pollinating the flower in the process. However, in the northern ranges of the flower, self-pollination is almost exclusively used. Few bees attempt to mate with it. This has led some to suspect that in the past, another species of bee was the target of the orchids mimicry and since its disappearance the flower has been forced to adapt either to self-pollinate or to attract different bees.

The history of the honey bee is rich, with an explosion of variety following the spread of flowering plants and a close relationship with those plants to this day. Bees and flowers have driven each other to an enormous variety of thousands of organisms and through their pollination along with that of other pollinating species, enable the great variety of plants, fruits, and nuts we enjoy today. All thanks to insects in the age of dinosaurs forming a relationship with new plants that has stood the test of time.



If that isn't commitment, then I don't know what is.


Sources

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982217301458
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S096098221300256X
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982213010567
https://americanbeejournal.com/the-elusive-genesis-of-apis-mellifera/
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-beguiling-history-of-bees-excerpt/
http://www.killowen.com/genetics14.html
https://zoom-ology.com/2018/08/23/reproductive-mimicry-the-bee-orchid/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-beguiling-history-of-bees-excerpt/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honey_bee


- Scott B.

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