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Dear Frienols Apimondia Congress, Vancouver, Canada |2-18 September 1999
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Contest
Winner COVER PICTURE First prize winner
of the First Cera Rica Beeswax Global Contest, Mr Hanbing Yang, President of Beijing Bee Products Co, China is pictured left with Mr Taizo Noda, President of Cera Rica Noda Co Ltd CERA RICA NODA CO LTD
he Apimondia 1999 Congress is aiming to be the best beekeeping meeting ever held. To achieve this, a programme has been arranged to be attractive for everyone working with bees: beekeepers, pollinators, scientists, project and extension workers, packers, equipment makers, apitherapists and teachers. The programme includes over 30 sessions with keynote lectures, symposia, and paper and poster sessions. There will also be workshops, tours, competitions and displays. The ApiExpo ‘99 Trade Show will be one of the largest ever beekeeping displays, taking place in the spectacular Vancouver Trade and Convention Centre. So far 26 countries are represented at ApiExpo.
The Congress working sessions are organised according to seven themes: * * Apitherapy Beekeeping Technology * * Bee Biology Bee Pathology * * Melliferous Flora and Pollination Beekeeping Economy * for Rural Beekeeping Development Once again, we anticipate that the Beekeeping for Rural Development sessions will be especially lively! We hope that many readers of B&D will be at the Congress: you are warmly welcomed to participate in the debates, formal and informal, that will inevitably take place throughout the week. Funding
To participate in the Congress you will need funding to cover your visa and travel costs, accommodation and subsistence in Canada. In the past, Congress delegates from many countries have been enabled to participate with sponsorship from local organisations. Contact development organisations and possible sponsors in your own country.
More information about the Congress
Nila Please note: Bees
is
shown in Look Ahead page
12 and on page 16.
Bradbear
for Development
is not a funding agency and we are unable to provide funds
for you to attend the Congress.
PUBLISHER
REPRODUCTION
SPONSORSHIP
Bees for Development, Troy, Monmouth, NP25 4AB,
Bees for Development allows
Production and distribution of Apiculture & Développement, the
Editor: Dr Nicola Bradbear Co-ordinator: Ms Helen Jackson
you to translate and reproduce material published in this journal. Please acknowledge Beekeeping & Development in full quoting our contact details, and send us a copy of the item.
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Advertisements and enclosures
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EDITORIAL
four times a year. 5000 copies of each edition are printed and distributed by airmail to readers world-wide. English and French versions are available. French translation by Ms Valérie Petey. is published
SUBSCRIPTION Beekeeping & Development provides information to help beekeepers world-wide. A year’s subscription (four editions) costs only 16 or US$35 and includes air mail delivery. Past editions are 5 each. Readers in developing countries may choose to pay by Beeswax Barter or Candle Currency (see B&D49 page 16).
French edition, is generously supported by API-Promo GTZ, Germany
in
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Bees for Development sincerely thanks all those beekeeping groups and individuals who assist us financially. We are most grateful.
We need YOUR support! Please sponsor a subscription for one of our many readers living where subscription
payment is impossible.
oday in Senegal you can find a hive - the Vautier hive (named after its inventor) - that is simply
designed, inexpensive, and adapted to African conditions. It allows a beekeeper to produce good quality honey without having to spend lots of money to build it. With the following information you should be able to build this hive yourself.
Beekeeping could be an important economic sector in Africa, and especially in Senegal. Unfortunately, the lack of
well-adapted techniques and a poorly organised support infrastructure often prevent beekeepers from making the income they wish for. Many projects have failed because the techniques are imported from Europe.
Hives in Senegal Four main types are used: The traditional hive; Hives imported from Europe; The “improved traditional” hive
- for example the Kenya top-bar hive; The modern local hive - the Vautier hive.
ctical beekeeping
Building materials *
*
1/2-1/3 bag of cement, depending on the amount of sand. You can also make the hive from clay;
New or scrap lumber, you can also use
48 cm
~+
Wax foundation. AE
et
ren
Figure 2. Top-bar dimensions
bamboo or branches; *
A wooden
mould that you build according to the size of hive you want.
You need to make two parts: the hive itself; and the frames. Strips of wax are attached to the frames.
Hive dimensions
28 mm
PART BUA Figure 3. Top-bar (viewed from above)
32m
WAIT, STOP | HOw DARE YOU ABANDON My
TRADITIONAL
THEY COME/ SO SOON 7200.
\F
.f
WEZZZ Youry
AZZZ
HIGHNESS, I HAVE JusTr ING PECTED THE INTERIOR MEETS OUR NEGOS PERFECT t. YOU WISH,
GRACE. THIS MX HOUSE HAS Mo. ROOM FOR, 8ro, HONEY TOO.
!
LOOK WHAT A SPLEND/D NEW HOME FOR, My COLON. THE OLD ONE WAS SMALL. WE SHALL OCCUPY 1T AT ONCE!
The Vautier hive should be raised off the ground standing on rocks or tyres. Sometimes bees will directly inhabit the . . hive; sometimes the beekeeper must : . transfer them there (possibly using a bait hive placed high in the trees) . Management is simple. The bee colony will occupy the volume that it needs. At harvest time, open the hive, remove the frames that are full of honey, and replace them with new frames. Close the hive until the next harvest.
You can obtain 20-25 kg of honey per year. Within one year of use you can make a return on your investment . . because the materials for making the hive are simple and easily found in rural areas ,
This article has been adapted from the . . original by Karamokho Sakho (National Beekeepers’ Union of Senegal) describing the hive invented by Mr Vautier. First
published in Baobab 27 (December 1998), and reproduced here with kind permission from RITA/ALIN, Casier Postal 3, Dakar-Fann, Senegal.
A Bees
for Development publication
-
Page 5
There’s a whisper down the field where the year has shot her yield,
And the ricks stand grey in the sun Singing: “Over then, come over, for the bee has quit the cloer,
And your English summer’s done” Rudyard Kipling The Long Trail
part
e
Is
pollination adequate?
the Tropics
Growers can discover whether their
populations of wild pollinators, and decrease honey crops from honeybee colonies.
crops are receiving sufficient pollination With an increase in mechanisation of by hand-pollinating (self- and cross-) a . : . . sample of the flowers, and comparing the farming and accompanying field size, a . . . extent of fruit set with flowers left similar dilemma is arising in the tropics. At present, many countries in the tropics alone. Research should also reveal whether pollination provides advantages in addition to greater seed or fruit yield. For example, pollination can influence the quality as well as the size of the crop; when pollination is inadequate, small, lopsided, or otherwise misshapen and inferior fruits may be formed. . . Increased pollination can induce a : greater proportion of early flowers to . . set seed, and so give an earlier and more . : uniform crop, with less loss at harvest.
More P pollinating 8 insects needed In temperate countries the gradual increase in field size has increased pollination need while a crop is flowering, thereby decreasing the ability of the local insect population to pollinate it adequately. The tendency to concentrate particular crops in certain areas intensifies the situation. However when the major crop in an area is not in flower, there may be too little forage. Thus, in temperate countries large-scale monocultures increase the demand for pollination, yet also decrease the
Page 6
-
A Bees
and sub-tropics still have small
plantations of a variety of crops, that flower at different times, growing in close proximity.
Moreover
the tropics, flowering of crops prolonged and less intensive than in temperate regions. Where growing conditions are favourable, farmers may take two or three harvests from the same plots . . during a year, and at any one time the in
is more
.
.
same crop species may occur ina sequence of growth stages. Many fruit . trees also flower and fruit throughout the year, although more abundantly at
certain periods. Therefore, forage for bees is often present at all times, and with prolonged crop flowering, fewer pollinators are needed than for temperate climate crops of equivalent size.
However, with increased monoculture in the tropics, flowering will be more concentrated and large pollinator populations will be needed for shorter periods; this is already happening in
for Development publication
II
some places. Furthermore, whereas pollen sources that allow cross-pollination are naturally present in small mixed farms, special provisions for . crop pollination may be necessary when : there are large areas of a uniform crop.
Good pollinators Many species of insects visit the flowers of commercial crops to seek nectar or pollen or both. Probably most transfer a few pollen grains and so contribute to
pollination, but relatively few are consistently good pollinators. .
.
The most efficient pollinators carry . plenty of pollen on their bodies, brush against the stigmas of flowers .
.
.
.
transferring the pollen, visit several . flowers of the same species in succession, and move frequently from flower to flower and for crops needing cross-pollination, from plant to plant. To find the pollinating efficiency of a particular type of insect, flowers in clusters are covered by a bag while still in the bud stage. When the flowers have opened, the bags are removed until the flowers are visited by the insect. The flowers are then bagged once more. The proportion of visited flowers that produce seed is subsequently determined.
including rotting fruit and stems, and pod husks from cocoa, and they are then released on plantations where midges are too few. The manipulation of fig
Poor pollinators
Some insects fail to pollinate because they are unable to release the flower’s pollinating mechanism. For example, wasp populations for pollination has of forage insects are too small to depress course long been practised. the keel of various leguminous flowers and can only visit those’ that have already Solitary bees are especially valuable for been ‘tripped’ (this means they have pollinating legumes. However for commercial use a species of solitary bee been visited by a heavier insect species must be gregarious, rapidly increase its that has made the nectar accessible). in find obtaining population in man-made nests, be easily difficulty Honeybees flowers some from nectar and pollen manipulated and managed, not be subject to uncontrollable parasites and disease, sometimes and with deep corolla tubes, visit the flowers of a commercial crop in without they fearn to obtain forage preference to those of other crops, and pollinating. have a peak of activity coinciding with it. However, in general the honeybees whose bodies are covered by branched Among other wild bees deserving of hairs are our most valuable pollinators, study are the stingless bees, found and even where numerous insect throughout the tropics. Little is know are often of their forage behaviour, and their occur, honeybees pollinators the most important. potential use as pollinators of commercial crops is largely unexplored. and
Comparing tropical conditions
temperate
Because of different climatic conditions
unpollinated flowers probably survive longer in temperate regions. Perhaps while the pollen is being transported by insects it becomes desiccated and inviable more quickly in hot countries.
Pollinators can vary too! The pollinator of
a particular crop may be different in different areas. In Jamaica,
skipper butterflies are the sole pollinators of papaya; they appear in considerable numbers at dusk, forage on both hermaphrodite and male flowers, and move rapidly from flower to flower and from tree to tree. In South Africa
Cross-pollination: the transfer of pollen from the anther of a flower to the stigma of a flower on another plant of the same species
Pollen tube: the tube formed when a pollen grain germinates. The male gametes travel down the tube to the egg.
Self-pollination: the transference of
pollen from an anther to a stigma of the same flower, or to the stigmas of flowers on the same plant.
For maximum pollination |
and insect pollinators it is most unwise
to apply findings from temperate countries to tropical ones, or from one hot country to another. For example pollen tube growth is probably faster in the tropics. On the other hand,
explanation please!
Growers must take honeybee colonies to crops needing pollination and not rely on colonies nearby. When colonies are placed even short distances away from crops rather than beside them, the proportion of bees that visit them is greatly diminished.
2 Colonies should be distributed throughout crops and not kept in large groups. When groups are too large and too far apart the foraging bees are concentrated near their hives, the uneven distribution of foragers is reflected in crop yield. In fruit orchards, small equidistant groups of four or five colonies each in the centre of a 2 hectare area, ensure an even distribution of foraging bees. 3
The proportion of foragers visiting a crop can be greatly increased by not taking colonies to it until it has begun to flower. When colonies are taken to crops before flowering has begun most of the foragers become conditioned to visiting other flower species in the locality, and will not readily forsake them when the crop requiring pollination comes to flower.
4 Colonies for pollination should be encouraged to collect pollen. On most crops, pollen-gatherers are more efficient pollinators than nectar-gatherers because they are more likely to transfer pollen to the stigmas and carry a greater amount of pollen on their bodies. Bamboo stems holding nests of solitary bees Osmia rufa
A bamboo nest split open to show a cell of Osmia rufa containing larva and pollen, separated from its neighbour by a mud wall
the first Cera Rica Beeswax
lobal contest his unique, international Contest for beeswax has been organised
by the Japanese Company Cera Rica Noda. The Contest was first announced in B&D36 and at the
THE PURPOSE OF THE CONTEST The Contest was organised to promote
Beekeeping & Development is pleased to bring news of the winners
beeswax as an international commodity. To meet the demands of modern industries, beeswax retaining a very high quality must be harvested by beekeepers. The Contest was intended to stimulate this high quality harvest.
On 14 April 1999, the winners of the Contest were announced at the
HOW THE BEESWAX WAS JUDGED
XXXIV Apimondia
Congress.
Award-giving Ceremony, held in Beijing Friendship Hotel, China.
First Prize
a) Methods: based on the Japanese Standard Analytical Method for Oil and Fat
b) Standards:
JSC! (the Japanese Standard
for Cosmetics Ingredients).
Evaluation
-
experiment
a) Methods: based on Cera Rica Noda patent on refining (patent number S40-16256)
b) Standards: judged by the value of Gardner and the appearance after the absorption.
Evaluation - experiment
Mr Arnold Grech, Malta. Awarded with a bronze-plated medal and an honorary
certificate, plus US$500.
Special Prize The National Agency for Beekeepers, Sierra Leone. Awarded with a bronze-plated medal and an honorary certificate, plus US$500.
Page 8
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Members of the Judge Committee
Agricultural Sciences Mr Taizo Noda, President, Cera Rica Noda
Co Ltd, Japan; President, Cera Rica Noda Biological Science
&
Technology (Beijing)
Co Ltd
I
Decolouring by absorption
Third Prize
Apimondia Standing Commission for Beekeeping for Rural Development
Mr Zhenming Jin, Former Director, Institute of Apicultural Research, Chinese Academy of
value, melting point, impurities
Mrs Marieke Mutsaers, Netherlands. Awarded with a silver-plated medal and an honorary certificate, plus US$1000.
President of the Judge Committee Dr Nicola Bradbear, President of the
General analysis Acid value, saponification value, iodine
Second Prize
THE JUDGE COMMITTEE
Mr Hideo Watanabe, President of the Apimondia Standing Commission for Beekeeping Economy
an honorary certificate, plus US$2000.
RARICA
b) Standards: judged by the peroxide value change with time.
The following evaluations were carried out on all samples entered for the Contest:
Beijing Bee Products Company, China. Awarded with a gold-plated medal and
ae
Analytical Method for Oil and Fat
II
Deodourising with steam a) Methods: based on Cera Rica Noda
COMMENTS FROM CERA RICA NODA The First Beeswax Global Contest, is an endeavour to create standards of quality for bee products. The samples of raw beeswax collected in this Contest showed that there exist large variations
in beeswax acid value, saponification value, decolouring, deodourising, colour patent on refining (patent number stability and AOM test. As these $40- 16256) variations are directly related to utilisation in cosmetics, food and other b) Standards: judged by sensual valuation by ten expert panellists from Cera Rica Noda. industries, the finding of great variation could be an important outcome of the Evaluating experiment III Contest. We would like to see a new i. Colour stability test standard for raw beeswax for industrial a) Methods: arranged according to the use. This could be created after further Japanese Standard Analytical Method for to clarify the relationships study, Oil and Fat between the variation in beeswax and b) Standards: judged by the colour change species of the honeybee, nectars, climate after heating. and the harvesting methods. ii,
AOM test
a) Methods: based on the Japanese Standard
A Bees for Development publication
Chinese beeswax has not yet reached its full market potential. In this Contest the
2
‘
‘
species of sumac berries), ke
and is widely produced in Japan. Used in soap, matches, ointments, pencils and crayons,
f |
Japanwax has an excellent compatibility with human skin due to its microcrystalline, cohesive structure, and is included in many cosmetics.
Beeswax Beeswax has excellent water resistant and emulsifying properties, and ! 7 is widely used in
sample evaluations showed us the excellent characteristics and great potential of Chinese beeswax. As beeswax of high quality, we hope that following this Contest, Chinese beeswax will be utilised in more modern industries.
Sierra Leone is shining in the special prize. Sierra Leone is a war-torn country where people are living under terrible conditions and it must be very difficult to prepare beeswax of perfect quality. However, in spite of the war, there are many beekeepers continuing with their work. The quality of their beeswax sample made the judges conclude that Sierra Leone certainly deserved the special prize.
Our company, Cera Rica Noda Co Ltd has a corporate philosophy and business
PHOTOGRAPHS and ILLUSTRATIONS
CERA RICA NODA CO LTD
vision called the “Cera Rica Concept”. This is to contribute ourselves to the development of agriculture, and to the improvement of the earth’s environment,
cosmetics, foods, medicines, adhesive tape, precision casting and moulding.
and local people's living, by developing new applications for Cera Rica
Candelilla Wax
(vegetable and animal waxes) to modern industries such as data recording materials. With this “Cera Rica Concept” several projects are underway in developing countries. The strong attachment of the beekeepers in China and Sierra Leone to beekeeping is good encouragement for our “Cera Rica Concept”. We hope that together with China’s winning of the first prize, and Sierra Leone’s winning of the special prize in the Contest we will have an active role in the development of
The candelilla shrub grows on the northern Mexican plateau at elevations of {000-2000 m.The shrub
“secretes candelilla wax to cover its surface r protection against the severe conditions yund on the plateau (little rainfall and annual
emperature differences as much as 60°C). andelilla wax has excellent lustre and
ardness, and moisture-proof and electricalssulating qualities. It is used in cosmetics, vater repellents, insulating agents, adhesives ind sizing agents.
beekeeping world-wide, and especially in developing countries.
Rice Wax
SECOND CONTEST
Produced especially in
Finally, aimed at promoting the development of the 2|st century's beeswax industry, we announce that the Second Cera Rica Beeswax Global Contest will be held in 2001.
CERA RICA NODA CO LTD Cera Rica Noda Co Ltd, a company with a high international reputation has a long history of accomplishments in dealing with natural waxes such as beeswax. Founded in 1832, the Company using its own original technologies developed over 167 years of work on natural materials, has achieved a series of patents that are always ahead of their time. The Company has developed many new applications for vegetable and animal waxes for various industries including high technology fields. The Company’s name “Cera Rica” is coined from the Spanish word cera for wax, and rica for wealth or abundance. Cera Rica effectively gives expression to the superb qualities found only in plant and insect waxes. These to qualities remain unparalleled by any petroleum-based synthetic wax produced
Ves~""
Y=
tt has no odour, bleaches
eadily, and impurities are easy to remove. ice wax has many applications as a coating
went for foods including chocolate, sweets,
‘chewing gum and pills. Its high melting point ‘and hardness finds use in paints and other coatings, food wrapping, shoe polish, coatings for electrical wires, and releasing agents.
'
_
Carnauba Wax
ym This wax is extracted from wee the leaves of palm trees (Palmaceae) growing in
North East Brazil. Palm leaves covered with powder containing wax prevent the evaporation of water in dry regions.
Of all
the Cera Rica plant waxes, Carnauba
date.
Wax has the most lustre, is most rigid and --hard, and has the most microcrystalline
Cera Rica Noda Co Ltd,
‘structure.
7202 Nakatsu, Aikawacho, Aikougun, Kanagawa 243-0303 Japan Fax (+81) 462 86 2800
:
In
addition to uses in medicines
nd cosmetics, this wax is used in polishes, n_candy, paper and leather; and in various
lishing agents, paints and printing ink.
for Development publication - Page
9
NEWS
|
Mali Honey is an important source of income for villagers in the Mena Region of Mali. In this region are some of the world’s poorest communities. The
*
OMADI Beekeeping Project, funded by the UK organisation Tree Aid, began in January 1999 to support the use of improved hives and honey extraction methods. Over two years the project aims to:
*
increase conservation awareness,
focusing on protecting and planting, particularly melliferous trees, and the prevention of bushfires;
Benin Api-Benin promotes beekeeping in Benin through: * *
*
*
Training; Production of beekeeping equipment: hives, smokers, protective clothes; Research on tropical beekeeping; Information provision for rural populations.
In 1998: *
* * *
258 persons were trained in beekeeping; 1310 frame hives were built ; 67 smokers were made; 656 litres of honey were harvested.
Two more beekeeping training courses will take place in 1999, in August and
Beekeeper at work at Beloku, Mali
*
*
provide protective clothing and equipment; train 60 beekeepers in management and honey and wax harvesting demonstrate soap and candle making, particularly to women, to establish income-generating enterprises; establish a beekeeping co-operative for the sharing of experiences and improved marketing possibilities.
TREE AID
*
PHOTOGRAPH
*
promote improved traditional hives and top-bar hives;
Sarah Francis, Tree Aid
Cameroon Kokoe’s Honeybees Not a new honeybee species, but the original and friendly name for a second division football team in Cameroon.
Two years ago young people in Kokoe, 100 km north of Yaounde democratically chose the name for their team. Club Vice-President, Mr Abega said, “We chose “honeybee” because we respect this insect. The bee produces honey, a very noble substance which is appreciated by everyone. Bees are very well disciplined, respectful, show solidarity and are busy... they are able to react firmly when attacked. If our young team has all these qualities, we will be successful”.
Sucré-Villages (an NGO working for sustainable beekeeping) visited the village for an information campaign on beekeeping. Some villagers have been trained and now have good, tasty honey. A scabies (itching) epidemic in the region has been eradicated thanks to a tonic mix of honey and lemon juice.
And the favourite football club of Sa’a Region is playing the “honeybee” game in all the stadia of the Central Province of the country. Adolph Libong Cameroon
B&D’s Correspondent
in
BAYER PLC
United
Uganda
Ki ngdom
PHOTOGRAPH
Participants in the three-day beekeeping course organised recently by the United At 87 years Natalie Women’s Apiary in Wobulenzi, Uganda. and photograph supplied by is one the of Information Hodgson —_ United Kingdom’s Henry Nsubuga, Secretary of UWA. oldest beekeepers. She has been beekeeping for over 40 years and welcomes 3000 visitors every year to her home, to buy honey and to visit her 1.6 hectares of lavender fields. In addition to honey, Natalie also sells
United Arab Emirates
pot-pourri, lavender oil, lavender plants, herbs and beeswax candles. Natalie was
Jos Schoenmakers sent
the winner of a competition sponsored by the company Bayer, as part of
in this photograph
of Sahoresh (above left) and Jos examining an almost perfectly intact comb from an
“UK National Varroa Week”.
Apis florea nest knocked out of a Prosopis juliflora “Mesquite” tree after
“The bees are an essential part of my lavender enterprise, and although | want docile bees | also need healthy bees for
a
recent desert storm on the Nakhille Estate, Umm Al Quwain. Not surprisingly the bees
pollination”, says Natalie.
are gone!
Tanzania The “let-alone” method
inspection of unoccupied hives will reduce these problems.
is discouraged still remains the but by many beekeepers, easiest wayY for catching 8 swarms.
«
.
;
Most beginners fail because they think that to catch a swarm you just bait a
Even the “let alone” method differs from area to area and beekeepers need to become experts in the one that suits
hive and site it.
their locality. David Yonaza
you are new to the area ask the local beekeepers when the swarming season takes place. A good indication is the reported increase in bee clusters on trees or invading buildings. Watch at what height above the ground the swarms fly to give you an idea of the height to site your hives. In miombo woodland bees depend on trees for forage and will fly high, making it difficult to attract swarms to hives on stands. If
Yusufu David is in standard five at Mkoami
Primary School, Kibaha in Tanzania. He is happy as his father has told him that the trapped swarm which was invading the nearby house will be transferred to his new hive. He has two top-bar hives with strong colonies which help towards his school fees.
LHVED.
Other problems arise from pests including ants, frogs, lizards, snails, and spiders whose webs block the hive entrance. Mice chew the wood and cause terrible internal destruction of the hive, filling it up with their nests. They also make the entrance too big which attracts the further hazard of occupancy by poisonous snakes! A weekly
PHOTOGRAPH
CU HWIStUe
DAVID YON.
Hive materials are important. Some types of wood produce an unpleasant smell which repels the bees, therefore not all trees will be used for making log hives. Molten beeswax or herbs are
Bees for Development publication
-
Page 11
look ahead
HUNGARY
noticeboard
8th International Symposium on Pollination
BRAZIL
HELP WANTED
Simpésio Brasileiro sobre Prépolis e Apiterapicos (Ist Brazilian Symposium on Propolis and Apitherapy)
10-14 July 2000, Mosonmagyarovar Further details from: Professor P Benedek,
The Association for Better Land Husbandry
Faculty of Agriculture, Pannon University of
a good, practical person with tropical
18-21 August 1999, Universidade de Franca Further details from: Secretaria do Simpésio, Universidade de Franca, Av Dr Arnaldo Salles
Agricultural Sciences, H-920] Mosonmayarovar, var 4, Hungary Fax (+36) 96 215 931
do Oliveira 201, Parque Universitario, CEP 14404-600, Franca SP, Brazil
NETHERLANDS
experience for a few weeks work. A contribution to travel costs, accommodation and a modest fee will be offered.
|
Specialists’ Meeting Pollination
Fax (+16) 722 0086 E-mail isimpropolis@unifran.br
30 September - 2 October 1999, Soesterberg Further details from: Ambrosiushoeve,
CANADA XXXVI Apimondia International
Ambrosiusweg Netherlands
Apicultural Congress 12-18 September 1999, Vancouver Further details from: Apimondia 99, c/o Venue West Conference Services, #645 - 375 Water
Street, Vancouver, BC V6B 5C6, Canada Fax (+1) 604 681 2503
|,
508! NV
SOUTH AFRICA XXXVI Apimondia
Hilvarenbeek, The
Apicultural Congress 1-7 September
www.honey.mcmail.com
2001,
Johannesburg
http://www.apimondia99.ca
1-00186 Rome, Italy
FRANCE
Fax (+39) 6685 2286 E-mail apimondia@mclink.it
INRA - Zoologie, Site Agroparc, 84914 Avignon Cedex 9, France Fax (+33) 490 31 6270
First Conference on Organic Beekeeping in the new Millennium Hazards of Genetically Modified Crops to bees
Tropical Bee: Management and Diversity Fifth AAA/7th IBRA Conference 19-25 March 2000, Chiang Mai Further details from: AAA, clo Honeybee
treatment of American Foulbrood and am interested to make discussions about this. Write to: |
!van Samsonovich,
PO Box #41,Novopolotsk 7, Belarus E-mail beeksam@yahoo.com
1999
Trostrey Lodge Garden Open Day 20 june 1999, Usk, South Wales Garden Open Day in aid of
Bees for Development Further details from: Bees at the address below left.
Germany Fax (+49) 5652 917992
National Honey Show
E-mail thiele.consult@t-online.de
for Development
11-13 November 1999, London Further details from: Revd H F Capener, Baldric Road, Folkestone, |
Kent CT20 2NR, United Kingdom Fax +44 (0) 1303 254579 E-mail nathon@zbee.com
MEMORY OF TWO BEE SCIENTISTS IN
It is with regret that we report news of the deaths of Professor Emeritus Ichiji Okada from Japan, and Dr Joop Beetsma from The Netherlands.
-
beekeepers and possibly visit their apiaries for more training. My special interest is
UNITED KINGDOM -
Further details from: Thiele und Thiele Consult, Franzrasen 2, D-37242 Bad Sooden,
Page 12
am a beekeeper in Belarus with 100 colonies. would like to contact other |
E-mail hsrc@agr.tamagawa.ac.jp
GREECE
22-24 September
|
Science Research Center, Tamagawa University, Machida Shi, Tokyo 194-8610, Japan Fax (+81) 427 39 8854
E-mail belzunce@avignon.inra.fr
Advertisements in Notice Board cost only 0.50 per word (VAT is applicable to EC countries)
SEEKING ASSISTANCE
THAILAND
7-9 September 1999, University of Avignon
E-mail jcheatle@net2000ke.com
10 Quay Road, Charlestown, PL23 3NX, United Kingdom for your new and second-hand books. 01726 76844 or
International
E-mail congress@venuewest.com
Further details from: Dr Luc P Belzunces, Laboratoire de Toxicologie Environnementale,
Send brief details to: Rodney Cheatle, Association for Better Land Husbandry, PO Box 601,Village Market, Nairobi, Kenya Fax (+254) 2 521 484
BEE BOOKS NEW AND OLD
Further details from: APIMONDIA, General Secretariat, Corso Vittorio Emanuele I! 101,
7th Symposium on Hazards of Pesticides to Bees
seeking beekeeping assistance from
J
Insect
on
is
6
Bees for
eestor
IRM
Professor Okada, the former Dean of the
Dr Beetsma
Faculty of Agriculture and former Director of the Institute of Honeybee Science,
was a founding member of
Tamagawa University, died on 18 March 1999. His work made him a world-
renowned bee researcher, with numerous contributions to the field of apicultural research.
A Bees for Development publication
died on 26 March 1999. He
NECTAR
(Netherlands Expertise Centre for Tropical Apicultural Resources), a celebrated bee scientist and author, and worked in many countries, encouraging beekeeping and development.
learn ahead
Varroa control
CANADA
Mr] T Brown who lives in Hornchurch in the United
Bee Venom Collection Course September 1999, Richmond Further details from: Michael Simics, 15
Apitronic Services, 4640 Pendleburgh Road, Richmond, BC V7E 1E7, Canada Fax (+1) 604 271 9414 E-mail msimics@direct.ca
WORK
IN
SWITZERLAND
An opportunity to work and train with a Swiss beekeeper.
Contact: Dr Marco Bosia,Via Gaggiolo 40, CH 6855 Stabio, Switzerland
SY
Kingdom claims that Varroa can be treated using a tincture made with green almond husks (not the shells) and alcohol. should be filled to about one cm from A large screw-top jar the top with shredded husks and vodka added to cover the husks before the lid is screwed on tightly.
7
\
After
a month the tincture will be ready for use when it has been strained into a clean jar. A piece of linen should be fixed the full length of one dummy board (used when a frame hiveis not full of frames). The linen should be painted with the# tincture until it is saturated, and placed behind the frames with the cloth facing the brood combs. After a month the dummy board should be removed, repainted and replaced. k
Mr Brown has used this remedy for several years
UNITED KINGDOM/TANZANIA
and his hives appear virtually Varroa-free.
Beekeeping in Rural Development August 1999, Cardiff University and Njiro Wildlife Research Centre Further details from:
Bees for Development at the address
leave the treated boards in the hives all year because the treatment is non-toxic and cannot affect the honey or the bees”, says Mr (Varroa-free) Brown. “|
Source: New Scientist, 20 February 1999
on page 12.
Natio
“Er 1,000’s of reasons ”“for being at the 68th
National Honey Show
Trophies and Cash Prizes Ingenious Inventions Stunning Displays Lith, 12th & 13th November 1999 Lots of Lectures at Kensington Town Hall, London Full details from: Revd. Capener Famous Faces Baldric Road, Folkstone, CT20 2NR, United Kingdom tel and fax: +44 (0)1303 254579 Top Traders email: nathon@zbee.com The Best of Friends 233656 F
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Registered Charity
Show your Best Honey to the World at the Best Honey Show in the World A Bees
for Development publication
-
Page 13
9g
& Development No'51
Rr The classroom: beekeeping questions and answers
_
Jerry Hayes
1998- 310
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bookshelf ADVANCE NOTICE: EXPECTED ANY MOMENT!
~
fel
EO
1999 - 720 pages. Hardback Available from Bees for Development price 90.00 including postage
Dr Eva Crane’s.latest work explores in detail the history of the human use of
ee ae
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Bote
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Mester s
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Eva Crile be a paeniaerisr SWS%ee meticulous work, making an important
recolataa Ue
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Questions and answers derived from the “Classroom” section of the American Bee Journal and the author's wide experience of beekeeping. Queen rearing, pollen, Varroa, beeswax, pesticides, equipment, honey, swarming, colony management, the list goes on: just about everything you can think to ask about frame hive beekeeping.
Beeswax and propolis for
ere
PY
acacasulicdr
pages. Paperback.
oem
edited by Pamela Munn 1998 30 pages. Paperback.
pleasure
-
Available from Bees for Development price 7.00 including postage
Information about the properties and merits of beeswax and propolis. The history of beeswax and of its refining, as well as extraction methods and uses are detailed in the first two chapters. Three further chapters cover the development of the commercial use of propolis, its use as a medicine, and in making beekeeping more profitable.
vel ge
Curative properties of bee pollen Seyed Javad Saadatmand and Shahrooz Daraei 1998 - [80 pages. Paperback.
IN ARABIC
Available from Bees for Development price 11.00 including postage
This book describes many years of research work investigating the The use of pollen properties of Pollen. is described
Saea'ZII
Ce oro
Available from Bees for Development price 37.00 including postage A
naa aD aeele]
fantastic new
including details
of collection, drying and processing. Several chapters provide information on the chemical components and properties of pollen and its medical use. The book is completed with an extensive pollen atlas.
'age 14
-
A Bees for Development publication
Adventures with the
Rajisof
and profit
Beekeeping in Western Canada edited by John Gruszka
<r
tats
order?
Western Canada
1998 - 172 pages.
Spiral-bound paperback
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Available from Bees for Development including postage price 25.00
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Provincial apiculturalists from each of the four western provinces of this major honey producing country have contributed their expertise to this book. In addition to the description of beekeeping in frame hives there is information about the honeybee colony; honey extraction; beeswax marketing, pollen and honey crops;
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honeybee health and pesticide poisoning. Five appendices provide a glossary of apicultural terms, further reading, beekeeping personnel in the Western Provinces, honey grading regulations for Canada and recommendation for feeding antibiotics. Attractive colour photographs keep the reader’s attention throughout.
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1999
- 90
pages in an.A4 hardback folder. Available from Bees for Development price 30.00
including postage This is a resource pack for schools, full of ideas to Cele lolol aot tue
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a
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Bees and Beekeeping in India
D
P
Abrol
1997 - 450 pages. Paperback. Available from Bees for Development price 25.00
including postage
This book provides a reference guide for beginners and experienced beekeepers. It includes an introduction to the history of beekeeping in India and the honeybee species Apis cerana, Apis dorsata, Apis florea and Apis mellifera. All the required topics are covered: diseases and pests, bee flora and flowering periods, pollination and bees in agriculture. Comprehensive appendices provide advice on training, honey analysis, the costs of starting beekeeping, where to go for more information, and extensive author and subject indices. Beekeeping with both Apis cerana and Apis mellifera.
A Bees
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Page 15
; aXe I O L S |
“At the fourth Asian Apicultural Association (AAA)
Conference held in Kathmandu in March 1998 approval was reached for the production of this new journal.
;
“The Asian Bee Journal features original research articles, research notes, and reviews, as well as news items. An opportunity to _disseminate research findings related to bees and beekeeping in -Asia, and to exchange ideas and views based on the findings.
Number
|,Volume
|
is now available.
Further information and .
.
guidelines for authors from:
DrV Sivaram, Chief Editor
Slaeaa
Full Members of
tgC
AAA:
..
importers and distributors of bee products want to a total of 100 tonnes of import crude propolis annually from beekeepers world-wide.
Specifications are:
US$30 per year
,
:
Fax
cenfound@sparrl.com
nnn
ASRWhieR
AAA was establishedin
1992 to encourage
friendly exchange of information between beekeepers: and bee scientists in Asia Membership US$20 per year |
TJamagawa University, Machida-shi, Tokyo 194-8610 Japan (+81) 42 739 8854 E-mail HSRC@agr.tamagawa.ac.jp
[fax
Prices negotiablein accordance with purity and
year
neue ITANK
|New members are welcome Bo [Asian Apicultural Association, clo Honeybee Science Research Center,
°
(grey may be accepted on inspection)
Tone
«
.
Purity - over 30% * Total flavonoid content - over 5% * Heavy metal content- below |0 ppm * Colour red, brown or green °
Special offer “and Dr Anita Menom, Editor Asian Bee Journal, clo Century Subscription to the Journalis free in 1999 when you pay your yearly Foundation, #193 Double | membership of AAA full 2nd Road, Indiranagar Stage, Subscriptions for non-members Bangalore 560038, India (+91) 080 3348346
quality
Contact: Chi Soon Kim, President Chunbo International Co Ltd 3rd Floor Kangnam-Jeil Bldg
822-4 Yoksham-Dong Kangnam-Ku, Seoul, Korea
K
Fax (+82) 2 555 8439 E-mail
Tel (+82) 2 555 840 and chunbopr@kotis.ni chunbopr@ppp.kornet2 I .net f
XXXVI INTERNATIONAL APICULTURAL CONGRESS
~
of the INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION of BEEKEEPERS’ ASSOCIATIONS
12-18 September Canada 193% ..gancouver,
Beekeeping & Development is published quarterly by Bees for Development, Troy,Monmouth, NP25 4AB, United Kingdom Telephone +44 (0)16007 13648 Fax +44 (0)16007 16167 E-mail busy@planbee.org.uk World Wide Web http://www.pianbee.org.uk Printed on environmentally friendly paper ISSN 1369 9555 Bees for Development 1999
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