Friday, August 20, 2010

Bee Knowledgeable: Bee Savvy!

Bee Savvy!
Here are some fun and interesting facts about honeybees...

  • The worker honeybee's brain has the densest neuropil tissue among the animal kingdom, even though it is only about the size of a sesame seed. Neuropil tissues make up most of the gray matter in animal brains. Bees have a remarkable ability to learn and remember things and are able to make complex calculations on distance travelled and foraging efficiency.
  • The queen bee can live for several years. Worker bees live for 6 weeks during the busy summer, and for 4-9 months during winter.
  • A honeybee beats its wings at an incredible 11,400 times per minute, that’s almost 200 beats per second! No wonder they have such a distinct buzzing sound when they fly. And honeybees can fly at the speed of 15 mph.
  • Honey bees have 170 odorant receptors; these are organs for smelling, like your nose. Compare that with fruit flies that only have 62 and mosquitoes that have 79 receptors. Their exceptional olfactory abilities include kin recognition signals, social communication within the hive, and odor recognition for finding food. Their sense of smell was so precise that it could make the distinction between hundreds of different floral varieties and tell whether a flower carried pollen or nectar from yards away.
  • Honeybees take on 80% of all insect pollination. Agriculture is greatly dependent on honeybees. Without them, one third of our food could not grow.
  • Honeybee colonies have a population of 20,000 to 80,000 bees!
  • Every year, each bee colony will collect up to 66 pounds of pollen for food. Where honey is the bee’s carbohydrate source, pollen is their protein.
  • Pollen is a nutrient dense food, consisting of up to 35% protein, 10% sugars, carbohydrates, enzymes, minerals, and vitamins A (carotenes), B1 (thiamin), B2 (riboflavin), B3 (nicotinic acid), B5 (panothenic acid), C (ascorbic acid), H (biotin), and R (rutine).
  • A honeybee visits somewhere around 50 to 100 flowers every day gathering nectar. To make one pound of honey, about 556 worker bees must visit around 2 million flowers.
  • A hive of bees must fly 55,000 miles to produce a pound of honey.
  • It would take approximately one ounce of honey to fuel a bee's flight around the earth.
  • Honey makes baked goods brown faster, and improves their shelf life.
  • Honeybees are the only insect that produces food eaten by man.
  • Humans have been collecting honey for over 10,000 years. There is ancient rock art that depicts people gathering honey and keeping bees that dates back to the Stone Age. In ancient Egypt and Rome taxes were paid with honey.
  • Honey contains almost all the substances necessary to sustain life, including enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and water; and it's the only food that contains "pinocembrin", an antioxidant associated with improved brain functioning.
  • In order to produce 1 lb of wax, the honey bees have to eat 17 to 20 lbs of honey.
  • Bees make a substance called propolis as a kind of glue and a varnish to seal cracks, repair, and help waterproof their hive. They make propolis by mixing tree resins or saps and wax.
  • Royal jelly is the powerful, milky substance that turns an ordinary bee into a Queen Bee. It is made of digested pollen and honey or nectar mixed with a chemical secreted from a gland in a nursing bee's head. It can be very expensive, rivaling the prices of imported caviar. It is used by some people as a dietary supplement and fertility stimulant. It is loaded with all of the B vitamins.
  • Honeybee stings can involve a little pain and swelling, or can be deadly if a person is allergic. There are a lot of people that get stung on purpose for health reasons. Bee sting therapy is used all over the world to help such things as arthritis, high blood pressure, neuralgia, and even high cholesterol.
  • Honeybees keep the temperature inside the bee hive 92° to 93° F, no matter what the temperature is outside. They do this by clustering and beating wings to generate warmth in the winter. In summer they cool the hive by fanning their wings at the entrance and placing droplets of water all over the comb inside. This effectively cools the hive, the same way a swamp cooler works.

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