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Archive for the ‘Bee Law’ Category

How a swarm locates a new nest site when less than 5% of the community know the way remains a mystery. Curious to find out how swarms cooperate and are guided to their new homes, Tom Seeley, a neurobiologist from Cornell University, and engineers Kevin Schultz and Kevin Passino from The Ohio State University teamed up to find out how swarms are guided to their new home and publish their findings on October 3rd 2008 in The Journal of Experimental Biology.

According to Schultz there are two theories on how swarms find the way. In the ‘subtle guide’ theory, a small number of scout bees, which had been involved in selecting the new nest site, guide the swarm by flying unobtrusively in its midst; near neighbours adjust their flight path to avoid colliding with the guides while more distant insects align themselves to the guides’ general direction. In the ‘streaker bee’ hypothesis, bees follow a few conspicuous guides that fly through the top half of the swarm at high speed.    Passino and Seeley decided to film swarming bees with high-definition movie cameras to find out how they were directed to their final destination.  

But filming diffuse swarms spread along a 12·m length with each individual on her own apparently random course is easier said than done. For a start you have to locate your camera somewhere along the swarm’s flight path, which is impossible to predict in most environments. The team overcame this problem by relocating to Appledore Island, which has virtually no high vegetation for swarms to settle on. By transporting large colonies of bees, complete with queen, to the island, the team could get the insects to swarm from a stake to the only available nesting site; a comfortable nesting box. Situating the camera on the most direct route between the two sites, the team successfully filmed several swarms’ chaotic progress at high resolution. 

Back in Passino’s Ohio lab, Schultz began the painstaking task of analysing over 3500 frames from a swarm fly-by to build up a picture of the insects’ flight directions and vertical position. After months of bee-clicking, Schultz was able to find patterns in the insects’ progress. For example, bees in the top of the swarm tended to fly faster and generally aimed towards the nest, with bees concentrated in the middle third of the top layer showing the strongest preference to head towards the nest.
 
Schultz also admits that he was surprised at how random the bees’ trajectories were in the bottom half of the swarm, ‘they were going in every direction,’ he says, but the bees that were flying towards the new nest generally flew faster than bees that were heading in other directions; they appeared to latch onto the high-speed streakers. All of which suggests that the swarm was following high-speed streaker bees to their new location.

More at: http://www.physorg.com/news142228088.html

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The Fable of the Bees: or, Private Vices, Publick Benefits consisted of a poem, The Grumbling Hive, or Knaves Turn’d Honest, along with an extensive prose commentary. The poem had appeared in 1705 and was intended as a commentary on England as Mandeville saw it

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A Spacious Hive well stock’d with Bees,

That lived in Luxury and Ease;

And yet as fam’d for Laws and Arms,

As yielding large and early Swarms;

Was counted the great Nursery

Of Sciences and Industry.

 

No Bees had better Government,

More Fickleness, or less Content.

They were not Slaves to Tyranny,

Nor ruled by wild Democracy;

But Kings, that could not wrong, because

Their Power was circumscrib’d by Laws.

 

The ‘hive’ is corrupt but prosperous, yet it grumbles about lack of virtue. A higher power decides to give them what they ask for:

 

But Jove, with Indignation moved,

At last in Anger swore, he’d rid

The bawling Hive of Fraud, and did.

The very Moment it departs,

And Honesty fills all their Hearts;

 

This results in a rapid loss of prosperity, though the newly-virtuous hive does not mind:


For many Thousand Bees were lost.

Hard’ned with Toils, and Exercise

They counted Ease it self a Vice;

Which so improved their Temperance;

That, to avoid Extravagance,

They flew into a hollow Tree,

Blest with Content and Honesty.

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De Mandeville’s most famous work, The Fable of the Bees, or Private Vices, Publick Benefits, came out in more than half a dozen editions beginning in 1714 (the poem The Grumbing Hive upon which it was based appeared in 1705) and became one of the most enduringly controversial works of the eighteenth century for its claims about the moral foundations of modern commercial society.

More at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fable_of_the_Bees

Text of the original poem:   http://pedagogie.ac-toulouse.fr/philosophie/textes/mandevillethefableofthebees.htm

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“As busy as a bee.”

“What is good for the swarm is not good for the bee.”

“Where there is honey, there are bees.”

“One bee is better than a handful of flies.”

“If you want to gather honey, don’t kick over the beehive.”

“Honey turns sour.”

“The diligence of the hive produces the wealth of honey.”

“A drop of honey will not sweeten the ocean.”

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The proverbs are from Insect Fact and Folklore , by Lucy W. Clausen. Published by Collier Books, N.Y., 1954.

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Honeybees are clever little creatures. They can form abstract concepts, such as symmetry versus asymmetry, and they use symbolic language — the celebrated waggle dance — to direct their hivemates to flower patches. New reports suggest that they can also communicate across species, and can count — up to a point.

With colleagues, Songkun Su of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, and Shaowu Zhang of the Australian National University in Canberra managed to overcome the apian impulse to kill intruders and cultivated the first mixed-species colonies, made up of European honeybees, Apis mellifera, and Asiatic honeybees,A. cerana. The researchers confirmed that the two species have their own dialects: foraging in identical environments, the bees signaled the distance to a food source with dances of different durations.

Remarkably, despite the communication barrier, A. cerana decoded A. mellifera’s dance and found the food.

From: http://www.clipmarks.com/clipmark/AC3920A0-F84A-4A34-A1FD-02E2769308F6/

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Blackstone Commentaries, Book II divides the entire animal kingdom into two classes.  Domesticated animals (ferae domitia) and wild (ferae naturae).   Wild animals are also divided into two classes — those free to roam at will and those which have been subjected to man’s dominion.

The honey bee that exists in the wild (lives in a tree cavity) is little different from the honey bee that lives within a man-made hive.   However, honey bees do swarm and thus are free to roam at will.  Honey bees do not trespass and the owner of property has no title to wild things using his property.  The owner of property can prevent others from coming onto his/her property and taking them and the property owner has a right to capture a swarm and hive it. Trespassing is a violation of the law and is enforceable.

“So long as bees remain in the hive of the claimant and on his premises or premises under his control, they are his.” (Supra.§ 5).

It is when they leave his/her hive and premises, as in swarming, that complications arise.  Case law has reflected the general idea that as long as the beekeeper keeps the swarm in sight and can identify them has his/hers, the beekeeper retains ownership of the bees. However, in getting the bees hived, one may be charged with trespassing.

From: http://www.gobeekeeping.com/LL%20lesson%20six.htm

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The properties of bees are wonderful noble and worthy. For bees have one common kind as children, and dwell in one habitation, and are closed within one gate: one travail is common to them all, one meat is common to them all, one common working, one common use, one fruit and flight is common to them all, and one generation is common to them all.

From: De proprietatibus rerum

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Extracted from New Scientist 16 August 2008

“Given a choice between two different flower beds, how can honeybees hunting for nectar be sure they’ve chosen the best patch?  A new computer model may provide the answer, as well as insights into the workings of a “hive mind” that could be used to guide swarms of robots.

To test this hypothesis, Ronald Thenius of the University of Graz in Austria built a computer simulation of a hive containing 5000 independent virtual bees.  Each forager started out visiting one of two different flower patches, but would switch destinations if it had to wait too long to be unloaded or was being serviced by too many receivers.

The idea that bees glean information from the number of unloadings is new, says Francis Rietnieks, a bee expert at the University of Sussex in the UK, but it needs to be verified in the field. “If their simulation suggests a novel means of information transfer, ideally they will devise a suitable experiment that can test the model’s predictions,” he says.

Thenius says the work could prove useful in controlling swarms of tiny robots for sensing and surveillance applications. Such robots could use a similar method of incidental communication to arrive at group decisions that could maximise resources. The system would be robust because it would rely on very simple observations, he notes.

The results, presented at the Artificial Life IX conference in Winchester, UK, last week were promising.  The virtual bees moved to the better nectar source at similar rates and in similar proportions to those observed for real bees.  “It’s like a new pub has opened with cheap beer: everyone’s trying to find it,” says Thenius. “The hive can gain up to 20 per cent more nectar this way.”

Full article at: http://www.newscientist.com/channel/life/mg19926696.200-computer-model-of-bees-probes-the-hive-mind.html

Also from: http://www.clipmarks.com/clipmark/06C4E037-2CE5-4F6D-83F1-7E36BE29FF8E/

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Bees have devised a very effective method of communicating information about sources of food using a ROUND DANCE and a WAGGLE DANCE (or figure of eight). The dances do not appear to indicate the height of the food above ground level and in most cases this is not important since to a bee the source will be obvious.

Round Dance

This is used when the source of food (nectar or pollen) is less than 100 metres away. The bee dancing goes in a circle on the comb first one way, she turns round and then the other way round the circle. Food is passed from the dancing bee to those watching and following giving information about it’s taste and smell. The round dance does not appear to tell the bees in which direction to go to the food source just that the food “is close to the hive and tastes and smells like this”.

Waggle Dance

For food supplies more than 100 metres the waggle dance is used. The bee will run in a direction on the comb which indicates direction relative to the sun’s position. The bee uses the force of gravity (vertically downwards) as the position of the sun and if say the food is 30 ° to the left of the sun then the bee will dance 30 ° to the left of the vertical on the frame. Whilst the bee is indicating direction she waggles her body from side to side to indicate distance to the food source. The more waggles the closer the food source is to the hive.

The waggle dance gives both direction and distance to the food source and by tasting the food the bee knows what to look for.

From: http://www.cheshire-bka.co.uk/Beekeeping/beedance.php

 

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A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees.
He whose face gives no light, shall never become a star.
Eternity is in love with the productions of time.
The busy bee has no time for sorrow.

 

Extract from Proverbs of Hell by Willam Blake

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(Interested to know if there are any beekeepers who agree/disagree with this)

Things You’ll Need:

  • NUC Or Hives With Frames
  • Bee Brushes
  • Beekeeper Gloves
  • Protective Clothing
  • Drop Cloths Or Old Sheet
  • Duct Tape
  • Butcher Knife
  • Cotton String
  • Ropes
  • Ladders

Catching a Swarm Near the Ground

Step 1

Remove two or three frames from a beeless hive and position them at a height below your head.

Step 2

Shake the limb or bush holding the swarm to dislodge the bees.

Step 3

Replace the frames and lid of the hive after the swarm enters the hive.

Step 4

Leave the hive for a few hours while stray bees find their way into the hive.

Catching a Swarm High in a Tree

Step 1

Gather your equipment: lemon-scented furniture polish; ladder or rope and weight (such as a rock or any heavy object); drop cloth; and an empty hive body.

Step 2

Spread a sheet or drop cloth on the ground under the cluster.

Step 3

Place the empty hive body on the drop cloth under the swarm. You can use the drop cloth to gather up the swarm if it misses the hive body.

Step 4

Remove the top of the hive.

Step 5

Use the ladder if possible, or tie the weight to the end of the rope end and throw the weight over the limb where the bees are clustered.

Step 6

Jerk both ends of the rope to dislodge the cluster of bees.

Step 7

Replace the top of the hive after the swarm drops into the hive body.

Step 8

Leave the hive for a few hours while stray bees find their way into the hive.

– however I have removed the lines which suggested spraying Lemon Furniture Polish as I had some comments on this and have not found this a necessary addition.  Once the queen is in the box, the workers will follow.  Such is Bee Law!

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