The honey-bee is one of our best known
insects, whose relationship with humans can be traced back to the dawn of
humankind when early people ‘stole’ honey from wild bee nests. Cave paintings
in Spain from as long ago as 6000 bc show our ancestors taking honey from bees,
which surely indicates that beekeeping is at least as old as the other two
oldest professions!
By the time humans did come on the
scene, the honey-bee had already been around for about 40–50 million years or more – it had
evolved from its hunting-wasp ancestors and
had become a strict vegetarian. Bees and flowering plants then evolved with
each other in a truly remarkable relationship that changed and coloured the
world we live in. This evolutionary symbiotic relationship is probably the most
important reason why our world looks like it does today, and still the vital
work of bees goes on. It is a sobering thought that, if all humans were to be
wiped out, the world would probably revert to the rich, ecologically balanced
state that existed some 10,000 years ago. On the other hand, if bees and other
pollinating insects were to be wiped out, humans and other animals would not
last for long.
Bees pollinate plants so that plants
can reproduce, and that really is the bottom line. That is what bees are all
about. That is why we need bees and that is why hundreds of millions of
dollars, pounds and euros are spent annually by governments around the globe in
protecting bees, in bee research and in beekeeping subsidies of one type or another.
Because of their pollinating
activities, honey-bees are the most economically important insects on earth, and certainly the most
studied. Honey production is essentially a side
issue. The honey-bee’s role – and thus the beekeeper’s role – in this
becomes more important and valuable by the day as our farming and other
practices dramatically eradicate the habitats of other types of bees and
pollinating insects. Some insects can exist only by eating the pollen of
certain plants. If those plants were removed so that more crops could be
planted, bees and other pollinating insects would die out. What, then, would
pollinate our huge areas of mono-crops? The answer would be to truck in honey-bees
by the million.
Pollination can be achieved only by
using large numbers of honey-bees. In this way, our crops and wildflowers are
pollinated, and the beekeeper can obtain a pollination fee and honey for sale.
As a reward for pollination, and as an enticement to the bee, most plants offer
food – nectar – in return. The bees take this, alter it through the addition of
enzymes, reduce its moisture content and store it as honey so that they and
their colony may survive winter periods or other periods of dearth. In this way
they differ from wasps, bumble-bees and other types of bee, whose colonies die
out on the approach of winter, with only the newly mated queens hibernating until
the spring when they will start new colonies.
A. M. Awan (Author)
About Admin Author:
A M Awan Currently working as Marketing Executive at Oasis Agro Industries Pakistan, and hobbies to read about agriculture, share latest information with others
A M Awan Currently working as Marketing Executive at Oasis Agro Industries Pakistan, and hobbies to read about agriculture, share latest information with others
Post a Comment