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Bee - a member of the family that includes ants

A Wisdom Archive on Bee - a member of the family that includes ants

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants

A selection of articles related to Bee - a member of the family that includes ants

Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume, cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - Open air hives, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, <strong>Africanized bee</strong> - 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

ARTICLES RELATED TO Bee - a member of the family that includes ants

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Swarming honeybee - Swarming location

When honeybees swarm from the hive they do not fly far at first. They may gather in a tree or on a branch only a few meters from the hive. There, they cluster about the queen and send scout bees out to find a final location. The swarm may fly for a kilometer or more to the scouted out location. When the swarm first forms a cluster it is relative easy to capture the swarm in a suitable box. There are also swarm traps w ...

See also:

Swarming honeybee, Swarming honeybee - Swarm management, Swarming honeybee - Swarming location

Read more here: » Swarming honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Swarming honeybee - Swarming location

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Pesticide toxicity to bees - Common insecticides toxic to bees used on soybeans

Many insecticides used against soybean aphids are highly toxic to bees. Orthene 75S (acephate) Address 75 WSP (acephate) Sevin (Carbaryl) Lorsban 4E (Chlorpyrifos) Dimate (Dimethoate) Steward 1.25 SC (Indoxacarb) Lannate (Methomyl) Cheminova Methyl 4EC (Methyl Parathion) Penncap M (microencapsulated Methyl Parathion) Tracer (Spinosad) < ...

See also:

Pesticide toxicity to bees, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Classification of toxicity based on Lethal Dose 50% LD50mg/bee, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Bee kill rate per hive, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Highly Toxic Pesticides to Bees, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Carbamates, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Organophosphates, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Synthetic pyrethroids, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Chlorinated cyclodienes, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Chloronicotines, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Herbicides, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Others, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Highly toxic and banned in the US, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Moderately toxic, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Relatively non-toxic, Pesticide toxicity to bees - Common insecticides toxic to bees used on soybeans

Read more here: » Pesticide toxicity to bees: Encyclopedia II - Pesticide toxicity to bees - Common insecticides toxic to bees used on soybeans

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB

Paenibacillus larvae (formerly classified as Bacillus larvae) is a spore-forming bacterium. This disease only affects the bee larvae but is highly infectious and deadly to bees. Infected larvae will darken and die. Lab testing is necessary for definitive diagnosis, but a good field test is to touch a dead larva with a toothpick or twig. It will be sticky and "ropey" (drawn out). Foulbrood also has a characteristic odor, and experienced beekeepers with a good sense of smell, can often detect the disease upon opening a hive. In t ...

See also:

Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Honeybee - Honeybee life cycle

Like other eusocial bees, a colony generally contains one breeding female, or "queen"; a few thousand males, or "drones"; and a large population of sterile female workers. The female workers mature from nurse bees to become foragers. The foragers die usually when their wings are worn out after approximately 500 miles of flight. Honeybee wings beat at a constant rate of 230 beats per second or 13,800 beats/minute. The frequency of the wing beats was much higher than expected for an insect of this size. Honey bees make up for carrying h ...

See also:

Honeybee, Honeybee - Other honey collecting insects, Honeybee - Origin and distribution of the genus Apis, Honeybee - Beekeeping, Honeybee - Honeybee life cycle, Honeybee - Products of the honeybee, Honeybee - Pollination, Honeybee - Honey, Honeybee - Beeswax, Honeybee - Pollen, Honeybee - Propolis, Honeybee - Hazards to honeybee survival, Honeybee - Honeybee predators, Honeybee - Insects, Honeybee - Reptiles and Amphibians, Honeybee - Birds, Honeybee - Mammals, Honeybee - Honeybee Communication, Honeybee - Sources, Honeybee - Trivia, Honeybee - Designated state insect

Read more here: » Honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Honeybee - Honeybee life cycle

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping leading practices - Controversial or emerging practices

Beekeeping leading practices - All beekeepers. Food Grade Mineral Oil as a miticide  Recent research by Dr. Pedro Rodriguez and others has suggested that a Food Grade Mineral Oil (FGMO) vapor fogged into the hive can be an effecitive miticide. The vapor droplets are sized to interfere with the mites' respiration without affecting the respiratory apparatus of the larger bees. Research continues in order to: improve the consistency of results improve the cost- ...

See also:

Beekeeping leading practices, Beekeeping leading practices - Explanation of categories, Beekeeping leading practices - Generally accepted, Beekeeping leading practices - All beekeepers, Beekeeping leading practices - Hobbyist beekeepers, Beekeeping leading practices - Commercial beekeepers, Beekeeping leading practices - Controversial or emerging practices, Beekeeping leading practices - All beekeepers, Beekeeping leading practices - Hobbyist beekeepers, Beekeeping leading practices - Commercial beekeepers

Read more here: » Beekeeping leading practices: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping leading practices - Controversial or emerging practices

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers

There are several types of beekeepers: Hobbyists — They have a different day job but find beekeeping fun as just a hobby. Sideliners — Basically, sideliners have other income but moonlight as "beekeepers" for extra money. Commercial — Beekeeping is their only source of income. The modern hobby beekeeper is more likely to be a suburbanite: he or she tends to be a member of an active ...

See also:

Beekeeping, Beekeeping - History of beekeeping, Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers, Beekeeping - Protective clothing, Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Read more here: » Beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

The bees are usually kept in a Langstroth hive, that is wooden boxes, or supers, filled with frames that each hold a sheet of wax or plastic foundation: the bees produce wax and build honeycomb using the wax sheets as a starting point, after which they may raise brood or deposit honey and pollen in the cells of the comb. These frames can be freely manipulated and honey supers with frames full of honey can be taken and extracted for their honey crop. The more traditional skep is now largely unlawful in the United Sta ...

See also:

Beekeeping, Beekeeping - History of beekeeping, Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers, Beekeeping - Protective clothing, Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Read more here: » Beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Honeybees are susceptible to many of the chemicals used for agricultural spraying of other insects and pests. Many pesticides are known to be toxic to bees. Because the bees forage up to several miles from the hive, they may fly into areas actively being sprayed by farmers or they may collect pollen from 'contaminated' flowers. Pesticide losses may be relatively easy to identify (large and sudden numbers of dead bees in front of the hive) or quite difficult, especially if the loss results from a gradual accumulation of pesticide broug ...

See also:

Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery

Dysentery is a condition resulting from a combination of long periods of inability to make cleansing flights (generally due to cold weather) and food stores which contain a high proportion of indigestible matter. As a bee's gut becomes engorged with feces that cannot be voided in flight as preferred by the bees, the bee voids within the hive. When enough bees do this the hive population rapidly collapses and death of the colony results. Dark honeys and hon ...

See also:

Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - 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". ...

See also:

Beehive beekeeping, Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives, Beehive beekeeping - Tile hives, Beehive beekeeping - Skeps, Beehive beekeeping - Bee gums, Beehive beekeeping - Modern beehives, Beehive beekeeping - Langstroth hives, Beehive beekeeping - Top-bar hives, Beehive beekeeping - Beehive symbolism, Beehive beekeeping - Patents

Read more here: » Beehive beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beehive beekeeping - Beehive symbolism

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Aggressiveness

Africanized bees are characterized by their aggressiveness in establishing new hives and in their vigorous defensive behavior, attacking perceived threats to their hive, including people. Over the decades, hundreds of deaths in the Americas have been attributed to Africanized bees, many deaths resulting from multiple bee stings. This defensiveness has earned them the nickname "killer bees", the aptness of which is debated. Allergic reactions to bee venom from European honeybees also kills people, and it is difficult to estimate how many more people may ...

See also:

Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Open air hives

Read more here: » Africanized bee: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Aggressiveness

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood

Chilled brood is not actually a disease but can be a result of mistreatment of the bees by the beekeeper. It also can be caused by a pesticide hit that primarily kills off the adult population, or by a sudden drop in temperature during rapid spring buildup. The brood must be kept warm at all times; nurse bees will cluster over the brood to keep it at the right temperature. When a beekeeper opens the hive (to inspect, remove honey, check the queen, or just to look) and prevents the nurse bees from clustering on the frame for too long, the brood can b ...

See also:

Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - 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 wi ...

See also:

Beehive beekeeping, Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives, Beehive beekeeping - Tile hives, Beehive beekeeping - Skeps, Beehive beekeeping - Bee gums, Beehive beekeeping - Modern beehives, Beehive beekeeping - Langstroth hives, Beehive beekeeping - Top-bar hives, Beehive beekeeping - Beehive symbolism, Beehive beekeeping - Patents

Read more here: » Beehive beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beehive beekeeping - Traditional beehives

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Bee learning and communication - Learning

Learning is essential for efficient foraging. Bees are unlikely to make many repeat visits if a plant provides little in the way of reward. A single bee will visit different flowers in the morning and, if there is sufficient attraction and reward in a particular kind of flower, she will make visits to that type of flower for most of the day, unless the plants stop producing reward or weather conditions change. Bees are quite adept at associative learning, and many of the standard phenomena of conditioning take the same form in bees as they do in the verteb ...

See also:

Bee learning and communication, Bee learning and communication - Learning, Bee learning and communication - Communication, Bee learning and communication - Dance language, Bee learning and communication - Odor plume, Bee learning and communication - Trophallaxis, Bee learning and communication - Source

Read more here: » Bee learning and communication: Encyclopedia II - Bee learning and communication - Learning

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers

There are several types of beekeepers: Hobbyists — have a different day job but find beekeeping fun as just a hobby. Sideliners — have other income but moonlight as "beekeepers" for extra money. Commercial — beekeeping is their only source of income. The modern hobby beekeeper is more likely to be a suburbanite: he or she tends to be a member of an active ...

See also:

Beekeeping, Beekeeping - History of beekeeping, Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers, Beekeeping - Protective clothing, Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Read more here: » Beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Protective clothing

When interacting with the bees, novice beekeepers usually wear protective clothing (including gloves and a hooded suit or hat and veil). Experienced beekeepers do not use gloves because they make movement clumsy and can transmit disease from one hive to another. The face and neck are the most important areas to protect, so most beekeepers will at least wear a veil. Bees are calmed with a puff of smoke, triggering a feeding response in anticipation of possible hive abandonment due to fire and masking any alarm pheromone, before the beekeeper ...

See also:

Beekeeping, Beekeeping - History of beekeeping, Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers, Beekeeping - Protective clothing, Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Read more here: » Beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Protective clothing

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

The bees are usually kept in a Langstroth hive, that is wooden boxes, or supers, filled with frames that each hold a sheet of wax or plastic foundation: the bees produce wax and build honeycomb using the wax sheets as a starting point, after which they may raise brood or deposit honey and pollen in the cells of the comb. These frames can be freely manipulated and honey supers with frames full of honey can be taken and extracted for their honey crop. A few hobby beekeepers are adapting various top-bar hives commonly found in Africa. Th ...

See also:

Beekeeping, Beekeeping - History of beekeeping, Beekeeping - Types of beekeepers, Beekeeping - Protective clothing, Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Read more here: » Beekeeping: Encyclopedia II - Beekeeping - Types of beekeeping equipment

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding

Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection. The chief difference between the European races or subspecies of bees kept by American beekeepers and the Africanized stock is attributable to selective breeding. The most common race used in North America today is the Italian bee, Apis mellifera ligustica, which has been used for several thousand years. Beekeepers have tended to eliminate the fierce strains as they did, and the entire race of bees has thus been gentled by selective breeding. < ...

See also:

Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Open air hives

Read more here: » Africanized bee: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Geographic spread

As of 2002, Africanized honeybees had spread from Brazil south to northern Argentina and north to South and Central America, México, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and southern California. Their expansion stopped for a time at eastern Texas, possibly due to the large number of European bee beekeepers in the area. However, discoveries of the bees in southern Louisiana indicate this species of bees has penetrated this barrier, or have come as a swarm aboard a ship. In June 2005, it was discovered that the bees had penetrated the border of Texas ...

See also:

Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Open air hives

Read more here: » Africanized bee: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - Geographic spread

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - How to avoid bees

Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers. Bees are sensitive to low frequency vibrations and so an engine driven lawn mower may elicit a defense response from a hive or swarm. Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites. Take care not to walk barefoot on lawns containing blooming clover, which attracts foraging bees. Meat eating wasps can be attracted to food scraps near a picnic site and usually forage close to the ground as they seek out downed insects s ...

See also:

Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Open air hives

Read more here: » Africanized bee: Encyclopedia II - Africanized bee - How to avoid bees

Bee - a member of the family that includes ants: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle

Aethina tumida is a small, dark-colored beetle that lives in beehives. Originally from Africa, the first discovery of small hive beetles in the US occurred in Florida in 1987. They are mainly limited to the southeastern portion of the United States, but are slowly spreading with the annual migration of honeybee colonies used for pollination in other areas of the country. The life cycle of this beetle includes part of its development in the ground outside of the hive. Controls to prevent ants from climbing into the hive a ...

See also:

Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses

Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle

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