swarm1
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Swarm One
Permaculture notes, #00421
Every grower, especially a fruit and vegetable grower, needs to know about bees. A collection of hives is called an apiary, and those who tend them are apiculturists. Honeybees (Apis millifera) are responsible for pollinating several billion dollars worth produce each year. The United States would be quite literally unable to feed itself if something happened to all the honeybees at once.
When pollination is incomplete, the fruit doesn’t grow to the same proportions without a seed to grow around. If you’ve ever seen a fruit that’s all smooshed in on side, that is very likely what happened. If you cut it open, you’ll likely find a tiny little white speck where a big black seed should be. Studies have shown up to a 2/3 increase in yield when bees are used in conjunction with crops that they’re not deemed necessary for, such as squash.
Varroa mites have had a major impact on North American hives. Apiculturists have kept the tiny pest just at bay for nearly 20 years now, but you can only give the bees so many antibiotics and so many sugar treats until you make the problem worse by encouraging a resistant strain of mite. This problem has caused a lot of people to rethink control strategies and begin manipulating bees’ social behaviour as a super-organism. It takes more knowledge and more observation, but it is a classically sustainable solution.
How unfortunate that climate change is further decreasing the bees’ ability to survive! Many of the native species of bee (and there are dozens in Oregon) have been infected with mites now that weather has become observably chaotic. Even the kept honeybees are emerging from each successive winter with a greater population decrease than the year before and finding it harder to forage as the flowers try to adapt to the increase in UV light. It’s the sort of problem that screams, ‘‘There must be another way.’’
These bees were lucky. They lived amid a zillion acres of clover in South Dakota. When the hive gets too crowded they head off as a swarm with a fresh queen protected in the middle, looking for a new home. Not everyone knows bees are actually very docile when swarming, as there's no current home to protect. Just breathe as lightly and evenly as possible through your nose and wear light coloured clothing. I promise, you won’t be stung.
To sum up: If even one part of the system is suffering, the rest will be affected whether you’d considered that or not. Climate change will pull threads out of life’s tapestry that will require innovative and timely solutions.
Comments
I didn't know that, although I once had to
try to coax a swarm into a new hive when my
beekeeping aunt was away from home. I didn't
get stung but did find the bees very
uncooperative!
Posted 40 months ago.
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Ha
Posted 40 months ago.
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Just looking at that quickens my breath. No
matter what kind of logic anyone throws at
me, I'm terrified of anything that stings.
Posted 39 months ago.
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Nice. At least they know which way to go.
Posted 39 months ago.
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Nice trick! How do you get them holding the
sign for you? :)
Posted 38 months ago.
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Allow me to say: YUCK! Bees creep me out.
Posted 38 months ago.
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For another take on this image, check out
Andy Carl: www.flickr.com/photos/andreas_sgt/50008234/ .
May I add, hooray for the Creative Commons,
allowing people to be inspired by other's
work from all over the world. My head so
often gets stuck in science, that I sometimes
forget the very right-brained inspiration
that got me whippin' out that camera in the
first place.
Also, a most raucous shout out to my
special friend who is not only one of my
absolute favourite contact and an inpiringly
breathtaking photographer all of the time,
but also a straight-up dude who knows which
way is up. Yo!
Posted 37 months ago.
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This is one photo I could just not
take...very impressive. These were very
cooperative, swarming around such a great
sign.
Posted 34 months ago.
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WordMingle, a social vocabulary building
tool, pulled this picture for the word Mite
Posted 21 months ago.
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how interesting! Thanks for the heads-up.
Posted 21 months ago.
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Hi, I'm an admin for a group called Global warming - we CAN stop it !!! , and we'd love to have your photo added to
the group.
You have been awarded a Polar Bear Award
for contributing to global warming awareness
Posted 17 months ago.
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Hi, I'm an admin for a group called Infestation du jour , and we'd love to have your photo added to
the group.
Posted 13 months ago.
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Awesome! Thanks for adding this to
Infestation du jour!
Posted 13 months ago.
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Could be the BEE-Alive freeway!!!!
You are a great EARTHCARE nurturer!
Be an eco-living volunteer for us !
Test-drive for healthy-living bee-culture ,
Plus input on Recycling, heritage,
eco-design, etc.
Congrats! -- Please accept our AWARD.
Join if you wish, and add this image to
EARTHCARE Action!! ~ "FIRST - THE
EARTH!!"
Photo-ART [AWARD + FAV2] group
MOTHER EARTH 'PICK-ME-UP' AWARD
Be a 'Sustainability eagle' ...
Search out & photo-teach for EARTHCARE,
Volunteering & Sustainability !!!
Please link ECA-FTE with bee-culture events,
plus Community centers, Volunteer Groups,
Photo Galleries, Campus Institutes, etc. to
anchor
Sustainable Living and EARTHCARE .
~ "How great EARTH will be when all
Volunteer!"
HERE'S TO A SUSTAINABLE & 'GREEN'
2008 ~ "YEAR OF PLANET EARTH"!!!
Posted 2 months ago.
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