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Kingdom Animalia, Food Chain Consumers

Kingdom Animalia, Food Chain Consumers Phylum Arthropoda, exoskeleton, segmented, jointed appendages Class Insecta Order Hymenoptera, membranous wings, 2 sets, hooked Family Apiidae, Bees (20,000), Wasps, Ants Genus Apis, Honeybees, (7) Species Mellifera.

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Kingdom Animalia, Food Chain Consumers

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  1. Kingdom Animalia, Food Chain Consumers Phylum Arthropoda, exoskeleton, segmented, jointed appendages Class Insecta Order Hymenoptera, membranous wings, 2 sets, hooked Family Apiidae, Bees (20,000), Wasps, Ants Genus Apis, Honeybees, (7) Species Mellifera Apis Mellifera

  2. History of Beekeeping Essex County Beekeepers Association Practical Beekeeping 2007 Bill Bleem

  3. So, Who were the first to exploit bees for their Honey and Wax?

  4. Romans • Pliny wrote about beekeeping in about 50AD • Wrote about wax, and propolis • Described a transparent (Observation) hive • The Mead consumed by the Celts! • “Bees are the smallest of birds, and are born from the bodies of oxen” • Virgil wrote about beekeeping in about 40BC • Keep hives: • Near water • Out of the wind • Away for lizards, moths, and birds • Emphasized the hives ruler • Praised Bees for their abstension from Sexual intercourse • Spontaneous Generation?

  5. The Bible • In Exodus, Cannan is referred to as “The land of milk and honey.” • King Solomon: "My son eat thou honey, because it is good, and the honeycomb which is sweet to thy taste". • Samson : “..and he turned aside to see the carcass of the lion: and, behold, there was a swarm of bees and honey in the carcass of the lion.”

  6. Greeks • 384 BC, Aristotle wrote much about beekeeping. • Foulbrood • First to note that honeybee's don't visit flowers of different kinds on one flight, but remain constant to one species.

  7. India, 500BC

  8. Egypt • “When Ra weeps again, the water which flows from his eyes upon the ground turns into working bees. They work the flowers and trees of every kind and honey and wax comes into being.”

  9. Egypt 660BC

  10. Egypt, 1450 BC

  11. Egypt, 2400 BC

  12. 3000 BC we have written records on migratory beekeeping up and down the Nile river in ancient Egypt. Tablet from a Beekeeper pleading for someone to send donkeys to transport his hives before the floods took them!

  13. South Africa

  14. Spain, 4500BC

  15. Spain, 6000BC

  16. Spain 6000BC

  17. Neanderthal,130,000

  18. Australopithicus, 4M BC

  19. Primitive Primates?

  20. For 150 – 100 Million Years • Flowering plants have existed and produced nectar and pollen • For 50 – 25 Million Years • Solitary bees had existed, also early primates • For 20 to 10 Million Years • Social bees have produced and stored honey • For a few Million Years • Man has existed and has eaten honey • For a few Thousand Years • Records exist of man’s exploitation of honey

  21. Species • Dorsada – Asian, Large, Single Comb, Outside Dwelling • Floria – Asian, Small, Single Comb, Outside Dwelling • Cerina – Asian, Small, Parallel Comb, Cavity Dwelling • Mellifera – Africa/Europe/Mid-East, Parallel Comb, Cavity Dwelling • Many Races!

  22. Distribution Map

  23. Apis Mellifera Nest

  24. A. Florea Nest

  25. A. Dorsada Nests

  26. India 500BC

  27. Only 1 animal has more written about it than Bees: Man

  28. Beekeeping Evolution • Opportunistic Honey Hunting • Tending of Wild Hives • Relocating Wild Hives • Purpose Built Hives • Hollow Logs • Pottery Vessels • Skeps • Wooden Hives • Modern Managed Hives

  29. 0 to 1400 AD • Rome declining (300AD) • Fall of Rome (450AD) • Travel Unsafe • Knowledge not easily disseminated • Dark Ages • No written history • No major achievements • Black Plague 1350 (75 Million Dead!) • Beginning of the Renaissance (1400ish) • Printing Press 1450

  30. 1500 -1600 AD • In 1586, Luis Méndez de Torres first described the queen bee as a female that laid eggs. • 1609 Charles Butler identified the monarch as a female queen and the drone as a male bee. • In 1637, Richard Remnantrecognized that the worker bees were females.

  31. Francis Huber • Fully movable frame, Leaf, hive 1789 • Observations on Bees • Queen mating practices and role of Drones

  32. Johann Dzierzon • Discovery of parthenogenesis in Queen bees 1835. • Discovery of Royal Jelly and its role in Queen development 1854.

  33. Royal Jelly in a Queen Cell

  34. Now we understood the basic lifecycle of the Honeybee. • BUT • We still did not have a hive we could manage!

  35. The Problem with Hives • Excess Wax and Propolis make the hive very difficult to work. • Bees fill in everything and attach comb to walls. • To harvest the honey beekeepers would kill the bees and cut out the honeycomb. • Not at all efficient!

  36. Wild Bees build their honey combs about 1 and 3/8 inches apart.  Honey comb is about one inch wide, so this left a 3/8 inch passageway between the combs.   Some beekeepers built hives that forced the bees to build combs along "top bars" that were spaced about 1 and 3/8 inches apart.

  37. Movable Top Bar Hive

  38. Top Bar Comb

  39. Compartments!

  40. Honeybees around America • First Honeybees to America in 1622 • First documented apiary, Newbury 1640 • Spread with Settlers and via Swarms • Per Thomas Jefferson, 1784, to Native Americans: ‘White Man’s Flies’

  41. Rev. Lorenzo Lorraine Langstroth(1810 – 1895)“Father of American Beekeeping”Andover, MA 1836 - 1847

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