Bee in pollinating process |
Mass death of bees |
Honey processing |
Honey irrespective of the mellified man has a long history as a therapeutic, used since ancient times to treat many things ranging from bedsores and burns to amputations and stab wounds. As medicine, it’s not a bad choice; honey has been shown to have anti-bacterial and antiseptic activity, which in part explains its phenomenal keeping power. Thousand-year-old jars of perfectly edible honey have been found in Egyptian tombs.
Honey is a sugar, a mix of glucose and fructose although it contains hardly any water itself but can absorb water from its surroundings. Most microorganisms caught in honey are sucked dry and smothered to death. Honey is also acidic, with a pH of about 3.5, which makes it an unfriendly environment for bacteria. despite all of that, it contains a small amount of bacteria that makes hydrogen peroxide.
Honey production |
This process takes place in the guts of bees. Honey begins as nectar, the sugary secretions exuded by flowers as tempting lures for pollinators. Foraging bees collect nectar in abdominal honey sacs, and return with it to the hive, where they squirt it into the mouths of helpful house bees. The receiving bees then concentrate the watery nectar, sucking it into mouth and crop, and vomiting it repeatedly, 200 times or more. This converts nectar (30-40 percent sugar) to honey (a sticky 80 percent sugar); it also exposes it to a bee digestive enzyme called glucose oxidase that converts a fraction of the sugars to gluconic acid and hydrogen peroxide. The busy bees then pack the finished product into hexagonal wax storage cells in the walls of the hive, where it is intended to nourish bees.
People have been going through considerable trouble to get bees’ honey for millennia. The ancient Egyptians seem to have been the first to domesticate bees, a temple bas-relief from 2400 BCE is essentially a documentary on early beekeeping, tracing the process from hive to rows of sealed honey pots. The Egyptians passed their techniques on to the Romans, who enlarged the techniques. The oldest known Roman cookbook, abounds with recipes that call for honey, among them honey cakes, honey sauces, myrtleberries in honey, chicken livers with honey, barracuda with honey, and lentils with honey.
People has not only been eating honey, but drinking it as well. The Greeks tossed down dozens of honey-based drinks, like mead and others made from honey mixed with something else. Mulsum, for example, was wine mixed with honey; rhodomel is roses with honey; omphacomel is grape juice with honey, and the questionable thalassiomel is seawater with honey. Mead was the drink of choice in northern Europe. Pliny the Elder wrote of the early Britons, “these islanders consume great quantities of honey-brew.” Beowulf, King Arthur, and the rampaging warriors in Valhalla drank mead.
Honey has been our principal sweetener for much of human history. (Runners-up were boiled-down grape juice, date syrup, and in North America maple sugar.)
We get much more than honey from the bees. We get a hefty percentage of our food.
Bees Controls Our Food Supply
spraying plants with neonic |
In the fall of 2006, beekeeper David Hackenberg discovered that 360 of his 400 Florida hives were beeless. Such bee disappearances aren’t unprecedented; ever since people started keeping bees, they’ve been plagued by bee diseases, deaths, and disasters. In the general scheme of things, beekeepers can expect to lose up to 15 percent of their bees each winter. However, Hackenberg’s discovery proved to be the tip of a global iceberg. Suffering from what is now known as Colony Collapse Disorder or CCD, bees are vanishing from hives worldwide. Data from the winter of 2012-2013 showed an average loss of about 45 percent of hives across the United States, and in some places losses are even higher. Worried beekeepers refer to this as “beepocalyse” and “beemageddon.”
Source of Bees death
killing bees with neonictinoids |
It sounds like the best thing we can do for bees is to give them more of what they need. “Plant more flowers,” says May Berenbaum. “And be a little more tolerant of weeds in the garden.” And maybe mow a lot less lawn. Because there are a whole lot of foods out there that we sure don’t want to be without.