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Beehive beekeeping

Beehive beekeeping: Encyclopedia - Beehive beekeeping

Domesticated honeybees are kept in beehives. The bees use the hive space to raise brood and to store honey for the coming winter. A location where beehives are kept is known as an apiary. Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives. Traditional beehives provided an enclosure for the bee colony but little more. Because there is no internal structure provided for the bees to start from, the bees fill the space in the hive with comb. The comb is often cross-attached and cannot be moved without destroying ...

Including:

Beehive beekeeping, Beehive beekeeping - Bee gums, Beehive beekeeping - Beehive symbolism, Beehive beekeeping - Langstroth hives, Beehive beekeeping - Modern beehives, Beehive beekeeping - Patents, Beehive beekeeping - Skeps, Beehive beekeeping - Tile hives, Beehive beekeeping - Top-bar hives, Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives, Africanized bee - a hybrid bee with characteristics unsuitable for beekeeping., Apiary - a yard where behives are kept, Apitherapy - human therapy using bee venom, Bee - a member of the family that includes ants, wasps, and termites, Bee anatomy (mouth), Bee learning and communication, Bee sting, Bee venom therapy - also called apitherapy, Beehive - a housing for cavity-dwelling bees that allows inspection and honey removal, Beekeeping - bees are kept for their products (principally honey), and their utility in pollenating crops, Beekeeping leading practices - newer techniques of beekeeping, Brood (honeybee) - the egg, larval, and pupal form of the bee and the comb in which they develop, Buckfast hybrid bee - a productive bee suitable for damp and cloudy climes., Characteristics of common wasps and bees, Deseret - the beehive and its symbolism to the Church of Later-Day Saints (Mormons), Drone bee - the male bee, Diseases of the honeybee, Honeybee - bees particularly suitable for use in apiculture, Honeybee life cycle - the physical stages in the development of a mature bee starting from the egg, Laying worker bee - this worker will produce only drone bees, Langstroth_hive - commonly seen in developed countries as stacks of white boxes at the edges of fields and orchards, List of honeybee races, Pesticide toxicity to bees, Piping queen - queens will make audible sounds at certain times, Stingless bees - Trigona and Melipona bees kept from ancient times in Central America and Australia, Swarming - the means by which bee colonies propagate, Supercedure - replacement of a reigning queen by her workers, Queen bee - a single egg laying bee capable of producing workers, drones, and queens, Top-bar hive - an alternative to the Langsthroth box hive, with some advantages for casual beekeeping, Virgin queen - A queen that has not yet bred with drones, Western honeybee European honeybees, Worker bee - the many tasks performed by this class of bee during her short lifetime and her specialized single-use stinger now using template

Beehive beekeeping: Encyclopedia - Beehive beekeeping



Beehive (beekeeping)

This article is about hives for bees. For other uses of the term, see Beehive.


Domesticated honeybees are kept in beehives. The bees use the hive space to raise brood and to store honey for the coming winter. A location where beehives are kept is known as an apiary.

Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives

Traditional beehives provided an enclosure for the bee colony but little more. Because there is no internal structure provided for the bees to start from, the bees fill the space in the hive with comb. The comb is often cross-attached and cannot be moved without destroying it. This is sometimes called a 'fixed-frame' hive to differentiate it from the modern 'movable-frame' hives. Harvest generally destroyed the hives, though there were some adaptations with extra top baskets which could be removed when the bees filled them with honey. These were gradually supplanted with box hives of varying dimensions, with or without frames, and finally replaced by Langstroth equipment.

Honey from traditional hives was typically extracted by pressing - crushing the wax honeycomb to squeeze out the honey. Because of this harvest method, they typically provided more beeswax but far less honey than a modern hive.

Skeps and other fixed-frame hives are no longer in wide use (and are illegal in many countries) because the bees and the comb cannot be inspected for disease or parasites without destruction of the honeycomb and usually the colony.

There are three basic styles of traditional beehive; Tile hives, Skeps and Bee gums.

Beehive beekeeping - Tile hives

Clay tiles were the customary homes of the bees around the eastern end of the Mediterranean. Long cylinders of baked clay were used in ancient Egypt, the Middle East and to some extent in Greece and Italy. They sometimes were used singly, but more often stacked in rows to provide some shade, at least for those not on top. Keepers could smoke one end to drive the bees to the other end while they harvested honey.

Beehive beekeeping - Skeps

In northern and western Europe, baskets made of coils of grass or straw, called skeps, were used. In the simplest form, there is a single entrance at the bottom of the skep. There is no internal structure except what the bees build themselves.

Beehive beekeeping - Bee gums

In Eastern, particularly southeastern USA, sections of hollow trees were used up until the 20th century. They were called "gums" because they often were from red gum trees.

Sections of the hollow trees were set upright in "bee yards" or apiaries. Sometimes sticks or crossed sticks were placed under a board cover to give an attachment for the honeycomb. As with skeps, harvest of honey from these destroyed the colony. Often the human bee "robber" would sulphur the bees, killing them all, before even opening their nest. This was done by inserting a metal container of burning sulphur into the gum, an act that modern beekeepers find abhorrent.

Africanized bee - a hybrid bee with characteristics unsuitable for beekeeping., Apiary - a yard where behives are kept, Apitherapy - human therapy using bee venom, Bee - a member of the family that includes ants, wasps, and termites, Bee anatomy (mouth), Bee learning and communication, Bee sting, Bee venom therapy - also called apitherapy, Beehive - a housing for cavity-dwelling bees that allows inspection and honey removal, Beekeeping - bees are kept for their products (principally honey), and their utility in pollenating crops, Beekeeping leading practices - newer techniques of beekeeping, Brood (honeybee) - the egg, larval, and pupal form of the bee and the comb in which they develop, Buckfast hybrid bee - a productive bee suitable for damp and cloudy climes., Characteristics of common wasps and bees, Deseret - the beehive and its symbolism to the Church of Later-Day Saints (Mormons), Drone bee - the male bee, Diseases of the honeybee, Honeybee - bees particularly suitable for use in apiculture, Honeybee life cycle - the physical stages in the development of a mature bee starting from the egg, Laying worker bee - this worker will produce only drone bees, Langstroth_hive - commonly seen in developed countries as stacks of white boxes at the edges of fields and orchards, List of honeybee races, Pesticide toxicity to bees, Piping queen - queens will make audible sounds at certain times, Stingless bees - Trigona and Melipona bees kept from ancient times in Central America and Australia, Swarming - the means by which bee colonies propagate, Supercedure - replacement of a reigning queen by her workers, Queen bee - a single egg laying bee capable of producing workers, drones, and queens, Top-bar hive - an alternative to the Langsthroth box hive, with some advantages for casual beekeeping, Virgin queen - A queen that has not yet bred with drones, Western honeybee European honeybees, Worker bee - the many tasks performed by this class of bee during her short lifetime and her specialized single-use stinger now using template

Beehive beekeeping - Modern beehives

The modern beehive, designed in 1840 by father Jan Dzierżon, is made up of a series of square or rectangular boxes without tops or bottoms placed one on top of another. Inside the boxes frames are hung in parallel. The minimum size of the hive is dependent on outside air temperature and potential food sources in the winter months. The colder the winter, the larger the winter cluster and food stores need to be. In the regions with severe winter weather a basketball shaped cluster survives in a double box. In temperate and southern regions a winter cluster will survive in a single box or in a nuc.

There are several types of modern hive in common use, differing mainly in size and number of frames used. Types include Smith, Langstroth, Modified Commercial and Modified Dadant, top-bar or Kenya-type hives, plus regional variations such as the British Modified National Hive. The Langstroth hive is the most common worldwide.

Beehive beekeeping - Langstroth hives

Named for their inventor, Rev. Lorenzo Langstroth, these hives are typified by removable frames which allow the apiarist to inspect for diseases and parasites. Movable frames also allow the beekeeper to more easily split the hive to make new colonies. Langstroth presented his design in 1860 and it has become the standard style hive for 75% of the world's beekeeping.

Langstroth hives make use of the discovery of bee space, a characteristic of European honeybees which causes them to propolize small spaces (less than 1/4 inch), gluing wooden parts together and to fill larger spaces (more than about 3/8 inch) with wax comb but to hold the intermediate space open for traffic channels for the bees. His cleverly designed hive makes use of this bee space so that frames are neither glued together nor jammed up with burr comb - comb joining adjacent frames.

Langstroth hives make use of standardized sizes of hive bodies and frames to ensure that parts are interchangeable and that the frames will remain relatively easy to remove , inspect, and replace without killing the bees. Langstroth hive bodies are rectangular wooden or styrofoam boxes that can be stacked to expand the usable space for the bees.

Langstroth frames are thin rectangular structures made of wood or plastic and which have a wax or plastic foundation on which the bees draw out the comb. The frames hold the beeswax honeycomb formed by the bees. Ten frames side-to-side will fill the hive body and leave exactly the right amount of bee space between each frame and between the end frames and the hive body.

Langstroth frames are often reinforced with wire which makes it possible to extract honey in centrifuges which spin the honey out of the frames. The empty frames can be returned to the beehive for use next season. Since bees are estimated to use as much food to make one kilogram of beeswax as they would to make eight kilograms of honey, the ability to reuse comb can significantly increase honey production.

Beehive beekeeping - Top-bar hives

These hives were developed as a lower-cost alternative to the standard Langstroth hives and equipment. They are used by some devotees in the US, but are much more popular, due to their simplicity and low cost, in developing countries. Top-bar hives also have movable frames and make use of the concept of bee space.

The top-bar hive gets its name because the frames of the hive have only a top bar, not sides or a bottom bar. The beekeeper does not provide a foundation (or provides only a fractional foundation) for the bees to build from. The bees build the comb so it hangs down from the top bar.

Unlike the Langstroth hive, the honey cannot be extracted by centrifuging because a top-bar frame does not have reinforced foundation or a full frame. Because the bees have to rebuild the comb after each harvest, a top-bar hive will yield more beeswax but less honey. However, like the Langstroth hive, the bees can be induced to store the honey separately from the areas where they are raising the brood so that bees are less likely to be killed when harvesting from a top-bar hive than when harvesting from a skep.

Beehive beekeeping - Beehive symbolism

The beehive (usually as an iconified skep) is one of the symbols of the US state of Utah. It is associated with the doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and represents industry and hard work.

In Wellington, New Zealand, the round building used for Parliamentary offices is known as the "Beehive".

Beehive beekeeping - Patents

  • U.S. Patent 9300 -- Bee hive

See also

  • Africanized bee - a hybrid bee with characteristics unsuitable for beekeeping.
  • Apiary - a yard where behives are kept
  • Apitherapy - human therapy using bee venom
  • Bee - a member of the family that includes ants, wasps, and termites
  • Bee anatomy (mouth)
  • Bee learning and communication
  • Bee sting
  • Bee venom therapy - also called apitherapy
  • Beehive - a housing for cavity-dwelling bees that allows inspection and honey removal
  • Beekeeping - bees are kept for their products (principally honey), and their utility in pollenating crops
  • Beekeeping leading practices - newer techniques of beekeeping
  • Brood (honeybee) - the egg, larval, and pupal form of the bee and the comb in which they develop
  • Buckfast hybrid bee - a productive bee suitable for damp and cloudy climes.
  • Characteristics of common wasps and bees
  • Deseret - the beehive and its symbolism to the Church of Later-Day Saints (Mormons)
  • Drone bee - the male bee
  • Diseases of the honeybee
  • Honeybee - bees particularly suitable for use in apiculture
  • Honeybee life cycle - the physical stages in the development of a mature bee starting from the egg
  • Laying worker bee - this worker will produce only drone bees
  • Langstroth_hive - commonly seen in developed countries as stacks of white boxes at the edges of fields and orchards
  • List of honeybee races
  • Pesticide toxicity to bees
  • Piping queen - queens will make audible sounds at certain times
  • Stingless bees - Trigona and Melipona bees kept from ancient times in Central America and Australia
  • Swarming - the means by which bee colonies propagate
  • Supercedure - replacement of a reigning queen by her workers
  • Queen bee - a single egg laying bee capable of producing workers, drones, and queens
  • Top-bar hive - an alternative to the Langsthroth box hive, with some advantages for casual beekeeping
  • Virgin queen - A queen that has not yet bred with drones
  • Western honeybee European honeybees
  • Worker bee - the many tasks performed by this class of bee during her short lifetime and her specialized single-use stinger now using template

Other related archives

1840, Africanized bee, Apiary, Apitherapy, Bee, Bee anatomy (mouth), Bee learning and communication, Bee sting, Bee venom therapy, Beehive, Beekeeping, Beekeeping leading practices, Brood (honeybee), Buckfast hybrid bee, Characteristics of common wasps and bees, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Clay, Deseret, Diseases of the honeybee, Drone bee, Egypt, Europe, Greece, Honeybee, Honeybee life cycle, Italy, Jan Dzierżon, Langstroth hives, Langstroth_hive, Laying worker bee, List of honeybee races, Lorenzo Langstroth, Mediterranean, Middle East, New Zealand, Pesticide toxicity to bees, Piping queen, Queen bee, Stingless bees, Supercedure, Swarming, Top-bar hive, Top-bar hives, US, USA, Utah, Virgin queen, Wellington, Western honeybee, Worker bee, ants, apiary, beeswax, comb, grass, honey, honeybees, honeycomb, iconified, nuc, parasites, propolize, sulphur, termites, wasps, winter cluster



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Beehive beekeeping", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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