A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya

This research considered native Mayan stingless bees, Melipona beecheii, with special attention to decrease in their managed colonies. From a total of 155 beekeepers located in 60 communities, 58 were randomly selected to survey in 2011. Their experience ranged from less than one to 50 years, and initial colonies from one to 100. Both structured and open interviews were conducted. Participants generally reported they believed bees were obtaining less food, which could produce colony loss. The present and a previous survey in the Zona Maya show colony loss averages 4-5% each year. In this study, during an average of 10 years, 27 beekeepers lost none, 9 lost all, and the remainder lost 44% of their colonies. Further analysis revealed colony loss had no association with relative habitat disturbance, presumed Africanized honey bee abundance, or beekeeping experience. However, those initially with more colonies in a meliponary lost them at a greater rate, indicating competition for food. Initial colony number was near 11, but currently is near 4 per meliponary. Little colony propagation (husbandry) was the norm until recently, when initiatives including meliponiculture workshops stimulated more husbandry. Twenty-six percent of beekeepers had less than one year experience and they began meliponaries using wild colonies. Because established meliponicultors were found to very seldom rely on new wild colonies, increased husbandry efforts are necessary to offset natural mortality of managed colonies. Five meliponicultors increased their colonies over 300% in two years (40 to 123 colonies), whereas a 34% loss in nine years (480 to 206 colonies) was found among the individuals randomly surveyed.

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Main Authors: Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928, Roubik, David Ward 1951- autor/a 15114, Collí Ucán, Wilberto Ingeniero autor/a 8675, Güemes Ricalde, Francisco Javier Doctor autor/a 13801, Buchmann, Stephen L. autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Melipona beecheii, Conocimiento tradicional, Meliponicultura, Artfrosur,
Online Access:http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.2317/JKES130131.1
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:73662024-03-12T13:02:47ZA critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928 Roubik, David Ward 1951- autor/a 15114 Collí Ucán, Wilberto Ingeniero autor/a 8675 Güemes Ricalde, Francisco Javier Doctor autor/a 13801 Buchmann, Stephen L. autor/a textengThis research considered native Mayan stingless bees, Melipona beecheii, with special attention to decrease in their managed colonies. From a total of 155 beekeepers located in 60 communities, 58 were randomly selected to survey in 2011. Their experience ranged from less than one to 50 years, and initial colonies from one to 100. Both structured and open interviews were conducted. Participants generally reported they believed bees were obtaining less food, which could produce colony loss. The present and a previous survey in the Zona Maya show colony loss averages 4-5% each year. In this study, during an average of 10 years, 27 beekeepers lost none, 9 lost all, and the remainder lost 44% of their colonies. Further analysis revealed colony loss had no association with relative habitat disturbance, presumed Africanized honey bee abundance, or beekeeping experience. However, those initially with more colonies in a meliponary lost them at a greater rate, indicating competition for food. Initial colony number was near 11, but currently is near 4 per meliponary. Little colony propagation (husbandry) was the norm until recently, when initiatives including meliponiculture workshops stimulated more husbandry. Twenty-six percent of beekeepers had less than one year experience and they began meliponaries using wild colonies. Because established meliponicultors were found to very seldom rely on new wild colonies, increased husbandry efforts are necessary to offset natural mortality of managed colonies. Five meliponicultors increased their colonies over 300% in two years (40 to 123 colonies), whereas a 34% loss in nine years (480 to 206 colonies) was found among the individuals randomly surveyed.This research considered native Mayan stingless bees, Melipona beecheii, with special attention to decrease in their managed colonies. From a total of 155 beekeepers located in 60 communities, 58 were randomly selected to survey in 2011. Their experience ranged from less than one to 50 years, and initial colonies from one to 100. Both structured and open interviews were conducted. Participants generally reported they believed bees were obtaining less food, which could produce colony loss. The present and a previous survey in the Zona Maya show colony loss averages 4-5% each year. In this study, during an average of 10 years, 27 beekeepers lost none, 9 lost all, and the remainder lost 44% of their colonies. Further analysis revealed colony loss had no association with relative habitat disturbance, presumed Africanized honey bee abundance, or beekeeping experience. However, those initially with more colonies in a meliponary lost them at a greater rate, indicating competition for food. Initial colony number was near 11, but currently is near 4 per meliponary. Little colony propagation (husbandry) was the norm until recently, when initiatives including meliponiculture workshops stimulated more husbandry. Twenty-six percent of beekeepers had less than one year experience and they began meliponaries using wild colonies. Because established meliponicultors were found to very seldom rely on new wild colonies, increased husbandry efforts are necessary to offset natural mortality of managed colonies. Five meliponicultors increased their colonies over 300% in two years (40 to 123 colonies), whereas a 34% loss in nine years (480 to 206 colonies) was found among the individuals randomly surveyed.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorMelipona beecheiiConocimiento tradicionalMeliponiculturaArtfrosurDisponible en líneaJournal of the Kansas Entomological Societyhttp://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.2317/JKES130131.1Acceso en línea sin restricciones
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Melipona beecheii
Conocimiento tradicional
Meliponicultura
Artfrosur
Melipona beecheii
Conocimiento tradicional
Meliponicultura
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Melipona beecheii
Conocimiento tradicional
Meliponicultura
Artfrosur
Melipona beecheii
Conocimiento tradicional
Meliponicultura
Artfrosur
Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928
Roubik, David Ward 1951- autor/a 15114
Collí Ucán, Wilberto Ingeniero autor/a 8675
Güemes Ricalde, Francisco Javier Doctor autor/a 13801
Buchmann, Stephen L. autor/a
A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
description This research considered native Mayan stingless bees, Melipona beecheii, with special attention to decrease in their managed colonies. From a total of 155 beekeepers located in 60 communities, 58 were randomly selected to survey in 2011. Their experience ranged from less than one to 50 years, and initial colonies from one to 100. Both structured and open interviews were conducted. Participants generally reported they believed bees were obtaining less food, which could produce colony loss. The present and a previous survey in the Zona Maya show colony loss averages 4-5% each year. In this study, during an average of 10 years, 27 beekeepers lost none, 9 lost all, and the remainder lost 44% of their colonies. Further analysis revealed colony loss had no association with relative habitat disturbance, presumed Africanized honey bee abundance, or beekeeping experience. However, those initially with more colonies in a meliponary lost them at a greater rate, indicating competition for food. Initial colony number was near 11, but currently is near 4 per meliponary. Little colony propagation (husbandry) was the norm until recently, when initiatives including meliponiculture workshops stimulated more husbandry. Twenty-six percent of beekeepers had less than one year experience and they began meliponaries using wild colonies. Because established meliponicultors were found to very seldom rely on new wild colonies, increased husbandry efforts are necessary to offset natural mortality of managed colonies. Five meliponicultors increased their colonies over 300% in two years (40 to 123 colonies), whereas a 34% loss in nine years (480 to 206 colonies) was found among the individuals randomly surveyed.
format Texto
topic_facet Melipona beecheii
Conocimiento tradicional
Meliponicultura
Artfrosur
author Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928
Roubik, David Ward 1951- autor/a 15114
Collí Ucán, Wilberto Ingeniero autor/a 8675
Güemes Ricalde, Francisco Javier Doctor autor/a 13801
Buchmann, Stephen L. autor/a
author_facet Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928
Roubik, David Ward 1951- autor/a 15114
Collí Ucán, Wilberto Ingeniero autor/a 8675
Güemes Ricalde, Francisco Javier Doctor autor/a 13801
Buchmann, Stephen L. autor/a
author_sort Villanueva Gutiérrez, Rogel Doctor 1952-2019 7928
title A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
title_short A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
title_full A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
title_fullStr A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
title_full_unstemmed A critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (Apidae: Meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
title_sort critical view of colony losses in managed mayan honey-making bees (apidae: meliponini) in the heart of zona maya
url http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.2317/JKES130131.1
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