Global Information Lookup Global Information

Meliponiculture information


Meliponary with individual posts in the Pau Brasil village, in the Tupiniquim Indigenous Land, Aracruz, Espírito Santo.

Meliponiculture is the rational farming of stingless bees (SB), or meliponines (Meliponini tribe), which is different from apiculture (the breeding of bees of the Apis mellifera species; western honey bee or European honey bee; Apini tribe).[1] In meliponiculture, the hives can be organized in meliponary, places with suitable conditions of temperature, solar orientation, humidity, and food supply (flowers and resins).[2]

Traditional Aztec meliponiculture system in clay boxes or ollas.[3]

The objectives of meliponiculture are to produce and sell hives (or parts of them), honey, pollen, resins, propolis, wax, and other substrates such as attractants and trap nests; in addition to the ecosystem service of pollination itself, since bees are one of the main agents of pollination and the maintenance of biodiversity.[4] Furthermore, the activity may not provide saleable products but simply aim to protect species from extinction. Finally, it is also possible to use meliponines colonies to educate children about the environment, since most of these insects do not behave aggressively or harm human beings.[5][6][7][8]

Meliponiculturist from Boa Vista do Ramos, Amazonas.[9]

Indigenous peoples and traditional communities already raised stingless bees and used their honey for various health treatments (such as cataracts), for food and subsistence.[10] Meliponiculture has long been practiced by the native peoples of Latin America, especially those of Brazil and Mexico.[11]

Currently, there is a trend towards technification and the growth of scientific knowledge related to the breeding and management of SB, as it is an activity that generates products with high added value and is related to the preservation of natural environments.

  1. ^ Nogueira-Neto (1997, p. 35)
  2. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, pp. 75–77)
  3. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, p. 15)
  4. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, pp. 40–42)
  5. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, pp. 42–43)
  6. ^ "Abelhas sem ferrão podem ser bichos de estimação até para quem mora na cidade". Folha de S.Paulo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2023-05-19. Retrieved 2023-12-12.
  7. ^ "Lugar de uma paixão da infância: dentista decidiu criar abelhas no quintal de casa". O Popular (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2020-10-30. Retrieved 2023-12-12.
  8. ^ "Abelhas Jataí enriquecem a vivência das crianças com o meio ambiente na escola". Prefeitura de Jundiaí (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-12-12.
  9. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, p. 18)
  10. ^ LAGES FILHO, J. A Medicina Popular em Alagoas. Separata dos Arquivos do Instituto Nina Rodrigues. 1934.
  11. ^ Villas-Bôas (2018, pp. 14–15)

and 11 Related for: Meliponiculture information

Request time (Page generated in 0.5199 seconds.)

Meliponiculture

Last Update:

Meliponiculture is the rational farming of stingless bees (SB), or meliponines (Meliponini tribe), which is different from apiculture (the breeding of...

Word Count : 3463

Stingless bee

Last Update:

containing species that produce some usable honey. They are farmed in meliponiculture in the same way that European honey bees (genus Apis) are cultivated...

Word Count : 11602

Tetragonula carbonaria

Last Update:

workers have already contributed substantially to the colony’s welfare. Meliponiculture is the practice of stingless beekeeping, where beekeepers maintain...

Word Count : 3716

Caatinga

Last Update:

oleic oils, which undergirds much of the economy of northeast Brazil. Meliponiculture is also a well-developed and traditional activity in the region. One...

Word Count : 2035

Honey

Last Update:

apiculture, with the cultivation of stingless bees usually referred to as meliponiculture. Honey is sweet because of its high concentrations of the monosaccharides...

Word Count : 12885

Bee

Last Update:

the places they inhabited in 1980. Human beekeeping or apiculture (meliponiculture for stingless bees) has been practised for millennia, since at least...

Word Count : 12159

Beekeeping

Last Update:

practices in the world. The use of stingless bees is referred to as meliponiculture, which is named after bees of the tribe Meliponini such as Melipona...

Word Count : 9840

Bees in mythology

Last Update:

Bárbara C. (2018-12-01). "The organization of stingless beekeeping (Meliponiculture) at Mayapán, Yucatan, Mexico". Journal of Anthropological Archaeology...

Word Count : 1415

Melipona quadrifasciata

Last Update:

species of stingless bee. The use of stingless bees is referred to as meliponiculture, named after bees of the tribe Meliponini—such as Melipona quadrifasciata...

Word Count : 2444

Rimbunan Hijau

Last Update:

Development—Tiong Toh Siong Group of Companies Stingless Bee Farming (Meliponiculture)[citation needed] Trading & Retail Services Plastic Manufacturing Aquaculture...

Word Count : 566

Melaloncha

Last Update:

beekeeping, including efforts to keep native tropical stingless bees (meliponiculture), and the scale of financial losses due to these flies has not been...

Word Count : 1368

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net