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Africanised bee removals in Trinidad

Gladstone Solomon

Tobago Apicultural Society, Mesopotamia, Tobago

The arrival of Africanised honey bees in Trinidad, the most southerly island in the Caribbean, is undoubtedly the biggest game changer in the island’s beekeeping history. The first established colony was found in July 1979 in Saint Patrick County in south-western Trinidad. Annual reports from the Ministry of Agriculture indicate that a succession of swarms arrived from South America (11km away) and irreversibly changed beekeeping.

To date, the honey bees on Tobago, Trinidad’s counterpart in the twin island Republic, are of the same genetic stock as introduced by European colonists. This is because of the de facto prohibition of the movement of bees from Trinidad to Tobago, Tobago’s location 35km ‘up-wind’ of Trinidad, and the nature of passenger and cargo traffic between both islands, limits the possibility of undetected transportation of honey bee colonies.

Serious challenge

Africanised honey bee colonies pose a heightened challenge to public safety, particularly in urban areas, with their higher propensity to swarm and abscond, and to be defensive compared with their European counterparts. Their arrival precipitated a decline in Trinidad’s beekeeping sector and marked the end of the parallel development of beekeeping on both islands. There were significant reductions in both the number of colonies and beekeepers in the aftermath of the bee’s arrival. More than half of the beekeepers practising in 1978 had given up by 1984 because of the bee’s high swarm frequency and defensive nature.

Over 28,000 established feral colonies were destroyed or collected by the Ministry of Agriculture’s Bee Abatement Programme. A least 5,300 people and over 800 animals were stung by honey bees during the period 1979 to August 1992. By December 2005, 16 persons in Trinidad had died because of stings from Africanised bees.

The emergence of a new generation of beekeepers around the turn of the century with no prior exposure to the easier-to-manage European honey bees, and no option but to work with the available stock of Africanised honey bees, heralded the start of the resuscitation of beekeeping on the island. Hayden Sinanan, Inspector of Apiaries, estimates that currently there are 400 active beekeepers (roughly the same number as reported in 1978), managing approximately 9,000 colonies (almost 2,000 more than reported in 1978) in Trinidad.

Removals

Aditya Ramlochan is known as the “bee whisperer” because of his deft bee-handling and bee removal skills

The removal of honey bee swarms or established colonies from locations other than managed apiaries has always been integral to beekeeping. Bee removals were provided by the Ministry of Agriculture as a public service prior to, and more so, since the arrival of the Africanised honey bees. As beekeepers gained confidence in managing Africanised bees, their involvement in bee removals and the commercialisation of the activity accelerated. Bee removal has emerged as a specialised economic activity within the sector, with several beekeepers investing in related equipment such as bee vac’s, scaffolding, ladders etc. This development has been facilitated in part by constraints in the delivery of bee removal services by the Ministry.

The Trinidad and Tobago Beekeepers’ Association (TTBA) received 352 requests for bee removals between 1 May 2019 and 20 June 2020, with the highest percentage of calls received in May and June, and October and November. Khannaya Baboolal, Head of Apiaries at the Ministry informed that over the past year his office received an average of 150 removal calls per month with a data variance skewed towards more calls in the rainy season (the second half of the year). Allan Mahabir, Administrative Officer at the Ministry reported a similar pattern of removal calls, with a monthly average of 70. Bee removal calls were also received by the two other beekeeping associations in Trinidad, pest removal companies, the Electricity Commission, and individual beekeepers. Taken together, an estimated 3,600 bee removal calls were received from all sources over the past year.

The Inspector of Apiaries endorsed the estimated number of removal calls received. He referenced a study undertaken by the Ministry in 2005 which quantified annual bee removal requests at approximately 1,000 and noted that the current estimated number of removal calls may be because of the improved methods of communication resulting in more calls being made, urbanisation, and increases in the number of managed and feral honey bee colonies on the island.

Aditya Ramlochan, a beekeeper from Manzanilla on Trinidad’s east coast estimates that he has removed over 1,000 colonies since he started bee removals in 2001. Aditya recalled that he removed 100 swarms in 2018 and 120 in 2019. These were bumper years as he previously averaged 50-60 removals per year. Referred to by his peers as the “bee whisperer” because of his deft beehandling and bee removal skills. Aditya anticipates that he will remove more than 100 swarms by this year’s end.

Clients requesting bee removal services from the TTBA during daylight hours could expect to be contacted by a beekeeper within ten minutes of making the request. here there is agreement on the terms and conditions, and depending on the complexity of the removal, this is usually concluded within 24 hours.

Aditya anticipates that by the end of 2020 he will have removed over 100 swarms

Misconceptions

There have been increasing reports of misconceptions in clients’ expectations regarding bee removal services. Some clients are of the view that they are entitled to the honey removed as part of the process. Petra Rattan from Matura, a home-schooling mother and beekeeper with over five-year’s experience, remedied this situation by including on her removal estimate form that clients are required to sign, a statement which reads, “when we agree to remove bees from your premises it is our aim to safely relocate them. A successful colony requires bees, comb, honey, and pollen, as such all of the aforementioned are considered part of the removal process.”

Some clients believe they are doing the beekeeper a favour by allowing her/him to remove bees from their property and as such they should not be required to pay for removal services. There are, however, genuine cases where clients are not able to pay removal fees. Kern Cyrus from Chaguanas in central Trinidad has had encounters with such clients over the four years he has been doing bee removals. Kern does not see removals as strictly a business. He informed that “in instances where I realise a client is unable to pay, I remove the swarm anyway, sometimes at a reduced rate, it puts me in a position to help persons who often are under siege or feel threatened by a swarm of bees, it’s my way of contributing to the wider community in my capacity as a beekeeper”.

Petra Rattan is a home-schooling mother and beekeeper with over five-year’s experience of bee removal

Team work

Recognising the need to improve service delivery and customer education, a team of volunteers from the TTBA comprised mainly of persons involved in bee removals embarked on a mission, endorsed by the TTBA’s Executive, to draft proposals to enhance the TTBA’s bee removal portfolio, inclusive of a fee structure.

The team met on several occasions over a ten-week period via Zoom, and WhatsApp. Its final report includes these recommendations:

1. Enhance the current line of communication between the public and the TTBA regarding reporting of bee removals, through consistent educational outreach programmes via newspapers, radio, social media and television.

2. Amend the Process Flow for bee removal requests to comply with the 5-Step Diagram (right).

3. Form an exclusive WhatsApp Group, administered by the TTBA’s Executive, for Bee Removals. Conditions for inclusion and retention in the Group are as follows:

• Financial membership in the TTBA

• Practical skill and knowledge levels established by the TTBA

• Agreement to abide by a Code of Conduct and other requirements approved by the TTBA.

4. Organise at least one workshop/ course per year that covers the skills and knowledge required for inclusion in the Bee Removers WhatsApp Group.

5. Adopt the attached professionally drafted Bee Removal Contract Agreement for use as the authorised agreement document between beekeepers and clients.

6. Follow-up on discussions initiated by the Team with T&TEC and pests removal companies regarding establishing strategic alliances to treat with bee removals.

7. Approve the implementation of the Bee Removal Fee Structure shown at the foot of this page.

*This mobile friendly version of the article omits some tables and figures outlining fees and process to engage TTBA beekeepers in removals. These can be viewed on the full ISSUU or pdf versions.

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