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#yucatanbees — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #yucatanbees, aggregated by home.social.

  1. From 2020: #Mexico has 1,900 species of #bees and they’re all at risk: biologist

    by Susy Buchanan
    May 21, 2020

    "All of Mexico’s 1,900 different species of native bees are at risk of extinction, says Ricardo Ayala Barajas, a National Autonomous University researcher based at the Chamela Biology Station in Jalisco.

    "Most of Mexico’s bees do not sting and only 47 species produce honey, but all native species are endangered, explained the researcher on the United Nations World Bee Day, May 20.

    "In an interview with the newspaper Milenio, Ayala said that around the world there are approximately 20,000 different named species of bees, and like in Mexico, every one is threatened by the use of #insecticides and #deforestation.

    " 'A great effort is required to try to reduce the use of insecticides and make more careful use of natural resources, for the future of humanity and to care for the bees that help plants reproduce and generate fruits and seeds,' Ayala said. 'We must appreciate and understand them more in order to prevent them from disappearing.'

    "Bee conservation is on the rise in Mexico, just as it is globally.

    "In #Guanajuato, people who kill #bees or harm their #habitat can be fined up to 8,000 pesos (US $350). In #Yucatán, the government and communities are collaborating on a bee conservation project after significant bee populations have died, thought to be a result of crop dusting. A similar campaign is underway in #Campeche."

    Source:
    mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexic

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #NativeBees #YucatanBees #BeeConservation

  2. From 2020: #Mexico has 1,900 species of #bees and they’re all at risk: biologist

    by Susy Buchanan
    May 21, 2020

    "All of Mexico’s 1,900 different species of native bees are at risk of extinction, says Ricardo Ayala Barajas, a National Autonomous University researcher based at the Chamela Biology Station in Jalisco.

    "Most of Mexico’s bees do not sting and only 47 species produce honey, but all native species are endangered, explained the researcher on the United Nations World Bee Day, May 20.

    "In an interview with the newspaper Milenio, Ayala said that around the world there are approximately 20,000 different named species of bees, and like in Mexico, every one is threatened by the use of #insecticides and #deforestation.

    " 'A great effort is required to try to reduce the use of insecticides and make more careful use of natural resources, for the future of humanity and to care for the bees that help plants reproduce and generate fruits and seeds,' Ayala said. 'We must appreciate and understand them more in order to prevent them from disappearing.'

    "Bee conservation is on the rise in Mexico, just as it is globally.

    "In #Guanajuato, people who kill #bees or harm their #habitat can be fined up to 8,000 pesos (US $350). In #Yucatán, the government and communities are collaborating on a bee conservation project after significant bee populations have died, thought to be a result of crop dusting. A similar campaign is underway in #Campeche."

    Source:
    mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexic

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #NativeBees #YucatanBees #BeeConservation

  3. From 2020: #Mexico has 1,900 species of #bees and they’re all at risk: biologist

    by Susy Buchanan
    May 21, 2020

    "All of Mexico’s 1,900 different species of native bees are at risk of extinction, says Ricardo Ayala Barajas, a National Autonomous University researcher based at the Chamela Biology Station in Jalisco.

    "Most of Mexico’s bees do not sting and only 47 species produce honey, but all native species are endangered, explained the researcher on the United Nations World Bee Day, May 20.

    "In an interview with the newspaper Milenio, Ayala said that around the world there are approximately 20,000 different named species of bees, and like in Mexico, every one is threatened by the use of #insecticides and #deforestation.

    " 'A great effort is required to try to reduce the use of insecticides and make more careful use of natural resources, for the future of humanity and to care for the bees that help plants reproduce and generate fruits and seeds,' Ayala said. 'We must appreciate and understand them more in order to prevent them from disappearing.'

    "Bee conservation is on the rise in Mexico, just as it is globally.

    "In #Guanajuato, people who kill #bees or harm their #habitat can be fined up to 8,000 pesos (US $350). In #Yucatán, the government and communities are collaborating on a bee conservation project after significant bee populations have died, thought to be a result of crop dusting. A similar campaign is underway in #Campeche."

    Source:
    mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexic

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #NativeBees #YucatanBees #BeeConservation

  4. From 2020: #Mexico has 1,900 species of #bees and they’re all at risk: biologist

    by Susy Buchanan
    May 21, 2020

    "All of Mexico’s 1,900 different species of native bees are at risk of extinction, says Ricardo Ayala Barajas, a National Autonomous University researcher based at the Chamela Biology Station in Jalisco.

    "Most of Mexico’s bees do not sting and only 47 species produce honey, but all native species are endangered, explained the researcher on the United Nations World Bee Day, May 20.

    "In an interview with the newspaper Milenio, Ayala said that around the world there are approximately 20,000 different named species of bees, and like in Mexico, every one is threatened by the use of #insecticides and #deforestation.

    " 'A great effort is required to try to reduce the use of insecticides and make more careful use of natural resources, for the future of humanity and to care for the bees that help plants reproduce and generate fruits and seeds,' Ayala said. 'We must appreciate and understand them more in order to prevent them from disappearing.'

    "Bee conservation is on the rise in Mexico, just as it is globally.

    "In #Guanajuato, people who kill #bees or harm their #habitat can be fined up to 8,000 pesos (US $350). In #Yucatán, the government and communities are collaborating on a bee conservation project after significant bee populations have died, thought to be a result of crop dusting. A similar campaign is underway in #Campeche."

    Source:
    mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexic

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #NativeBees #YucatanBees #BeeConservation

  5. From 2020: #Mexico has 1,900 species of #bees and they’re all at risk: biologist

    by Susy Buchanan
    May 21, 2020

    "All of Mexico’s 1,900 different species of native bees are at risk of extinction, says Ricardo Ayala Barajas, a National Autonomous University researcher based at the Chamela Biology Station in Jalisco.

    "Most of Mexico’s bees do not sting and only 47 species produce honey, but all native species are endangered, explained the researcher on the United Nations World Bee Day, May 20.

    "In an interview with the newspaper Milenio, Ayala said that around the world there are approximately 20,000 different named species of bees, and like in Mexico, every one is threatened by the use of #insecticides and #deforestation.

    " 'A great effort is required to try to reduce the use of insecticides and make more careful use of natural resources, for the future of humanity and to care for the bees that help plants reproduce and generate fruits and seeds,' Ayala said. 'We must appreciate and understand them more in order to prevent them from disappearing.'

    "Bee conservation is on the rise in Mexico, just as it is globally.

    "In #Guanajuato, people who kill #bees or harm their #habitat can be fined up to 8,000 pesos (US $350). In #Yucatán, the government and communities are collaborating on a bee conservation project after significant bee populations have died, thought to be a result of crop dusting. A similar campaign is underway in #Campeche."

    Source:
    mexiconewsdaily.com/news/mexic

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #NativeBees #YucatanBees #BeeConservation

  6. From 2018... So, it looks like a relative of the #EuropeanHoneyBee did once exist in #NorthAmerica -- but they went extinct many years ago!

    "In 2009, paleontologists uncovered a single fossilized worker bee in the Stewart Valley Basin of west-central Nevada. This was no European honey bee. It was Apis nearctica, an extinct species of honey bee that lived during the middle Miocene epoch—14 million years ago. Preserved in a delicate paper shale deposit alongside other ancient insects, the fossil offers the first definitive evidence of #HoneyBees native to North America."

    However, #NativeBees (#MeliponaBeecheii) produce honey as well!

    "Ancient Honey, Without Honey Bees?

    If honey bees didn’t return to North America until the 1600s, how did the Maya harvest honey long before that?

    The answer lies in a different lineage of bees entirely: stingless bees of the tribe #Meliponini. These bees, especially those in the genus Melipona, are native to the tropics and subtropics. Revered by the ancient Maya, stingless bees were more than pollinators—they were spiritual symbols. The Mayan bee god, #AhMuzenCab, was honored for the gift of honey.

    The Maya’s favorite stingless bee was Melipona beecheii, or kolil kab in Yucatec Maya, meaning 'royal lady.' Unlike the vast colonies of honey bees, Melipona beecheii lives in smaller colonies and produces just two liters of honey per year—a fraction of the five gallons a typical honey bee hive can yield.

    Families traditionally kept hives in hollow logs near their homes. But the spread of aggressive Africanized honey bees has threatened this ancient practice, as stingless bees are unable to compete for resources."

    nativebeeology.com/2018/01/26/

    #WorldBeeDay #YucatanBees #MayanBees #NativeBees #BeeHistory

  7. From 2018... So, it looks like a relative of the #EuropeanHoneyBee did once exist in #NorthAmerica -- but they went extinct many years ago!

    "In 2009, paleontologists uncovered a single fossilized worker bee in the Stewart Valley Basin of west-central Nevada. This was no European honey bee. It was Apis nearctica, an extinct species of honey bee that lived during the middle Miocene epoch—14 million years ago. Preserved in a delicate paper shale deposit alongside other ancient insects, the fossil offers the first definitive evidence of #HoneyBees native to North America."

    However, #NativeBees (#MeliponaBeecheii) produce honey as well!

    "Ancient Honey, Without Honey Bees?

    If honey bees didn’t return to North America until the 1600s, how did the Maya harvest honey long before that?

    The answer lies in a different lineage of bees entirely: stingless bees of the tribe #Meliponini. These bees, especially those in the genus Melipona, are native to the tropics and subtropics. Revered by the ancient Maya, stingless bees were more than pollinators—they were spiritual symbols. The Mayan bee god, #AhMuzenCab, was honored for the gift of honey.

    The Maya’s favorite stingless bee was Melipona beecheii, or kolil kab in Yucatec Maya, meaning 'royal lady.' Unlike the vast colonies of honey bees, Melipona beecheii lives in smaller colonies and produces just two liters of honey per year—a fraction of the five gallons a typical honey bee hive can yield.

    Families traditionally kept hives in hollow logs near their homes. But the spread of aggressive Africanized honey bees has threatened this ancient practice, as stingless bees are unable to compete for resources."

    nativebeeology.com/2018/01/26/

    #WorldBeeDay #YucatanBees #MayanBees #NativeBees #BeeHistory

  8. From 2018... So, it looks like a relative of the #EuropeanHoneyBee did once exist in #NorthAmerica -- but they went extinct many years ago!

    "In 2009, paleontologists uncovered a single fossilized worker bee in the Stewart Valley Basin of west-central Nevada. This was no European honey bee. It was Apis nearctica, an extinct species of honey bee that lived during the middle Miocene epoch—14 million years ago. Preserved in a delicate paper shale deposit alongside other ancient insects, the fossil offers the first definitive evidence of #HoneyBees native to North America."

    However, #NativeBees (#MeliponaBeecheii) produce honey as well!

    "Ancient Honey, Without Honey Bees?

    If honey bees didn’t return to North America until the 1600s, how did the Maya harvest honey long before that?

    The answer lies in a different lineage of bees entirely: stingless bees of the tribe #Meliponini. These bees, especially those in the genus Melipona, are native to the tropics and subtropics. Revered by the ancient Maya, stingless bees were more than pollinators—they were spiritual symbols. The Mayan bee god, #AhMuzenCab, was honored for the gift of honey.

    The Maya’s favorite stingless bee was Melipona beecheii, or kolil kab in Yucatec Maya, meaning 'royal lady.' Unlike the vast colonies of honey bees, Melipona beecheii lives in smaller colonies and produces just two liters of honey per year—a fraction of the five gallons a typical honey bee hive can yield.

    Families traditionally kept hives in hollow logs near their homes. But the spread of aggressive Africanized honey bees has threatened this ancient practice, as stingless bees are unable to compete for resources."

    nativebeeology.com/2018/01/26/

    #WorldBeeDay #YucatanBees #MayanBees #NativeBees #BeeHistory

  9. From 2018... So, it looks like a relative of the #EuropeanHoneyBee did once exist in #NorthAmerica -- but they went extinct many years ago!

    "In 2009, paleontologists uncovered a single fossilized worker bee in the Stewart Valley Basin of west-central Nevada. This was no European honey bee. It was Apis nearctica, an extinct species of honey bee that lived during the middle Miocene epoch—14 million years ago. Preserved in a delicate paper shale deposit alongside other ancient insects, the fossil offers the first definitive evidence of #HoneyBees native to North America."

    However, #NativeBees (#MeliponaBeecheii) produce honey as well!

    "Ancient Honey, Without Honey Bees?

    If honey bees didn’t return to North America until the 1600s, how did the Maya harvest honey long before that?

    The answer lies in a different lineage of bees entirely: stingless bees of the tribe #Meliponini. These bees, especially those in the genus Melipona, are native to the tropics and subtropics. Revered by the ancient Maya, stingless bees were more than pollinators—they were spiritual symbols. The Mayan bee god, #AhMuzenCab, was honored for the gift of honey.

    The Maya’s favorite stingless bee was Melipona beecheii, or kolil kab in Yucatec Maya, meaning 'royal lady.' Unlike the vast colonies of honey bees, Melipona beecheii lives in smaller colonies and produces just two liters of honey per year—a fraction of the five gallons a typical honey bee hive can yield.

    Families traditionally kept hives in hollow logs near their homes. But the spread of aggressive Africanized honey bees has threatened this ancient practice, as stingless bees are unable to compete for resources."

    nativebeeology.com/2018/01/26/

    #WorldBeeDay #YucatanBees #MayanBees #NativeBees #BeeHistory

  10. From 2018... So, it looks like a relative of the #EuropeanHoneyBee did once exist in #NorthAmerica -- but they went extinct many years ago!

    "In 2009, paleontologists uncovered a single fossilized worker bee in the Stewart Valley Basin of west-central Nevada. This was no European honey bee. It was Apis nearctica, an extinct species of honey bee that lived during the middle Miocene epoch—14 million years ago. Preserved in a delicate paper shale deposit alongside other ancient insects, the fossil offers the first definitive evidence of #HoneyBees native to North America."

    However, #NativeBees (#MeliponaBeecheii) produce honey as well!

    "Ancient Honey, Without Honey Bees?

    If honey bees didn’t return to North America until the 1600s, how did the Maya harvest honey long before that?

    The answer lies in a different lineage of bees entirely: stingless bees of the tribe #Meliponini. These bees, especially those in the genus Melipona, are native to the tropics and subtropics. Revered by the ancient Maya, stingless bees were more than pollinators—they were spiritual symbols. The Mayan bee god, #AhMuzenCab, was honored for the gift of honey.

    The Maya’s favorite stingless bee was Melipona beecheii, or kolil kab in Yucatec Maya, meaning 'royal lady.' Unlike the vast colonies of honey bees, Melipona beecheii lives in smaller colonies and produces just two liters of honey per year—a fraction of the five gallons a typical honey bee hive can yield.

    Families traditionally kept hives in hollow logs near their homes. But the spread of aggressive Africanized honey bees has threatened this ancient practice, as stingless bees are unable to compete for resources."

    nativebeeology.com/2018/01/26/

    #WorldBeeDay #YucatanBees #MayanBees #NativeBees #BeeHistory

  11. Women Work to Save #NativeBees of #Mexico

    A happy story about #bees, #BeeConservation, and empowering women in Mexico.

    Mar 5, 2014

    Excerpt: "Spaniards introduced European #honeybees to Central America around 1620, and they are now well established. European honey bees (and their Africanized form) do compete with gentle #NativeBee species for pollen and nectar on flowers. #MeliponaBeecheii is a #ForestBee, so if they could find flowering trees and shrubs, competition with honey bees might not be a problem. Alas, #Yucatan is heavily logged.

    "The Yucatan peninsula sits right in the path of a lot of big storms; quite a few hurricanes, floods, and droughts have caused beekeepers to lose all or most of their hives. Native stingless bees are quite sensitive to #pesticides, so that isn't helping either."

    Learn more:
    wired.com/2014/03/women-work-s

    Archived version:
    archive.ph/C5qzc

    Link to video:
    youtube.com/watch?v=4c4v1E2mRhw

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #EmpoweringWomen #YucatanBees #IndigenousWomen

  12. Women Work to Save #NativeBees of #Mexico

    A happy story about #bees, #BeeConservation, and empowering women in Mexico.

    Mar 5, 2014

    Excerpt: "Spaniards introduced European #honeybees to Central America around 1620, and they are now well established. European honey bees (and their Africanized form) do compete with gentle #NativeBee species for pollen and nectar on flowers. #MeliponaBeecheii is a #ForestBee, so if they could find flowering trees and shrubs, competition with honey bees might not be a problem. Alas, #Yucatan is heavily logged.

    "The Yucatan peninsula sits right in the path of a lot of big storms; quite a few hurricanes, floods, and droughts have caused beekeepers to lose all or most of their hives. Native stingless bees are quite sensitive to #pesticides, so that isn't helping either."

    Learn more:
    wired.com/2014/03/women-work-s

    Archived version:
    archive.ph/C5qzc

    Link to video:
    youtube.com/watch?v=4c4v1E2mRhw

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #EmpoweringWomen #YucatanBees #IndigenousWomen

  13. Women Work to Save #NativeBees of #Mexico

    A happy story about #bees, #BeeConservation, and empowering women in Mexico.

    Mar 5, 2014

    Excerpt: "Spaniards introduced European #honeybees to Central America around 1620, and they are now well established. European honey bees (and their Africanized form) do compete with gentle #NativeBee species for pollen and nectar on flowers. #MeliponaBeecheii is a #ForestBee, so if they could find flowering trees and shrubs, competition with honey bees might not be a problem. Alas, #Yucatan is heavily logged.

    "The Yucatan peninsula sits right in the path of a lot of big storms; quite a few hurricanes, floods, and droughts have caused beekeepers to lose all or most of their hives. Native stingless bees are quite sensitive to #pesticides, so that isn't helping either."

    Learn more:
    wired.com/2014/03/women-work-s

    Archived version:
    archive.ph/C5qzc

    Link to video:
    youtube.com/watch?v=4c4v1E2mRhw

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #EmpoweringWomen #YucatanBees #IndigenousWomen

  14. Women Work to Save #NativeBees of #Mexico

    A happy story about #bees, #BeeConservation, and empowering women in Mexico.

    Mar 5, 2014

    Excerpt: "Spaniards introduced European #honeybees to Central America around 1620, and they are now well established. European honey bees (and their Africanized form) do compete with gentle #NativeBee species for pollen and nectar on flowers. #MeliponaBeecheii is a #ForestBee, so if they could find flowering trees and shrubs, competition with honey bees might not be a problem. Alas, #Yucatan is heavily logged.

    "The Yucatan peninsula sits right in the path of a lot of big storms; quite a few hurricanes, floods, and droughts have caused beekeepers to lose all or most of their hives. Native stingless bees are quite sensitive to #pesticides, so that isn't helping either."

    Learn more:
    wired.com/2014/03/women-work-s

    Archived version:
    archive.ph/C5qzc

    Link to video:
    youtube.com/watch?v=4c4v1E2mRhw

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #EmpoweringWomen #YucatanBees #IndigenousWomen

  15. Women Work to Save #NativeBees of #Mexico

    A happy story about #bees, #BeeConservation, and empowering women in Mexico.

    Mar 5, 2014

    Excerpt: "Spaniards introduced European #honeybees to Central America around 1620, and they are now well established. European honey bees (and their Africanized form) do compete with gentle #NativeBee species for pollen and nectar on flowers. #MeliponaBeecheii is a #ForestBee, so if they could find flowering trees and shrubs, competition with honey bees might not be a problem. Alas, #Yucatan is heavily logged.

    "The Yucatan peninsula sits right in the path of a lot of big storms; quite a few hurricanes, floods, and droughts have caused beekeepers to lose all or most of their hives. Native stingless bees are quite sensitive to #pesticides, so that isn't helping either."

    Learn more:
    wired.com/2014/03/women-work-s

    Archived version:
    archive.ph/C5qzc

    Link to video:
    youtube.com/watch?v=4c4v1E2mRhw

    #WorldBeeDay #SaveTheBees #EmpoweringWomen #YucatanBees #IndigenousWomen