Showing posts with label hives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hives. 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.

Read More

Share Tweet Pin It +1

0 Comments

In #aboutthebees communication hives Megan

Inside The Beehive

HOW TO TELL IF YOU HAVE A STRONG HIVE

Introduction

On the outside, a bees' nest looks like a simple place where bees are flying in and out and going about their daily business. However, the bees' nest is really a complicated interconnected network where each bee has a job to do in order to contribute to the collective of the hive. Have you ever wondered how bees work together in order to produce honey? Each bee belongs to one of three groups within the hive, with each group having a specific job to do. Let's take a look at some of the work done by each of the three castes: the workers, the drones, and the queen

Homer Simpson DGAF About Bees GIF - Bees Homer HomerSimpson GIFs

Workers

Workers are the largest of the three castes, consisting of 85% of the hive. These are the bees that are responsible for leaving the hive to collect pollen and nectar and are also responsible for various tasks around the hive, including feeding the queen, drones and larva, and making beeswax. How are these jobs divided up between the workers, you may ask? They are divided by age! Worker bees, at some point in their short 506 week lives, will likely end up participating in all tasks in the hive.

Worker bees start off as an egg in a part of a honeycomb. Then, the first task they are assigned is to clean out the part of the honeycomb where they grew. They then are given the task of nursing bees, which means they have to help feed newly hatched larva and keep them warm. Then, as the bee ages, they will begin to do some housekeeping around the hive. There is so much for these bees to do, including storing nectar and pollen, building honeycomb, guarding the entrance, and they are even responsible for warming the hive if it gets too cold. Then, the worker will become a forager, after around 20 days old which means they are the ones that will leave the nest to collect nectar, pollen, and any other resources the hive may need. Workers will be foragers until they die, about one month after they are born.

Fun fact: All worker bees are females. However, they are infertile and are unable to produce offspring of their own due to a pheromone released by the queen.

Another fun fact: Worker bees live longer in the winter since they spend more time inside the hive, keeping it warm instead of going out and gathering supplies. 

Bees Pollen Pollination GIF - BeesPollen Pollination AdventureTime GIFs

Drones

Drones are the male bees, and their purpose in life is to mate with the queen. They have no foraging tools nor do they have stingers, but they are equipped with large eyes to help them find the queen to mate with. Therefore, they depend on the workers to feed them and keep them alive. There aren't too many drones in a hive, since a queen only needs to mate once. Any eggs that the queen lays that are unfertilized will become drones. When a drone mates with the queen, they die. 

Fun fact: A drone's eyes are almost twice the size of a worker bee's.

Bee GIF - Bee GIFs

Queen

There is only one queen bee in a hive. The queen lays the eggs of every bee born in the hive and she influences the bees in her hive using pheromones, which are chemicals that are released into the hive. How does the hive determine when an egg is to become a queen bee? The process starts when the hive begins to become full or when the ability of the queen to lay eggs diminishes. Workers will build special cells that hang off a honeycomb, where the existing queen will lay some eggs, and the larvae in these cells are fed royal jelly. It is important that the queen mates with multiple drones before she lays eggs in order to assure genetic diversity in the hive. Once the new queen is established, she goes cell-to-cell and stings all the other queen bee cells, and a battle ensues between them. The winner becomes the new queen. Then the old queen, some workers and drones leave the hive and find a site for a new one.

Fun fact: The queen is the largest bee in the colony.

Bee Busy GIF - Bee Busy Flying GIFs

Communication

So how do workers, drones, and the queen all communicate to ensure all of the jobs are done and that everything in the hive is running smoothly? There are a couple of methods of communication, including...

Pheromones: The queen gives off a pheromone that allows her to communicate with the bees in the hive. The pheromones are what keep the worker bees from being able to produce viable offspring, and are also what attract the drones to mate with her, and also signal to the hive that she is doing well. Pheromones do much more than this; they can also alert the hive if there is a threat. If one bee stings something, the rest of the worker bees are alerted to the threat with pheromones. There are two types of pheromones, the primer pheromones that are released by the queen to ensure everything that stays as it should, and the released pheromones which are released by the workers in response to events.

Movement: The workers may perform a series of movements to teach other workers the location of food sources away from the hive. The movement series is known as the "waggle dance" and the distance and speed indicate the distance of the food source, and the way the bee aligns their bodies is indicative of the direction of the food source.

For more information, check out these links:


Works Cited


Thanks for reading!


- Megan M.

Read More

Share Tweet Pin It +1

0 Comments