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Different Manipulations
An understanding of all the seasonal and miscellaneous management practices described under different chapters is required for manipulation of bee colonies for honey production. However, additional information is required for the commercial beekeepers to fully exploit the bee colonies for increased honey production.
1. Use of queen excluder
2. Use of good combs 3. Preventing bee losses 4. Selective breeding 5. Bee forage management 6. Adoption of scientific migratory beekeeping 1. Use of queen excluder: To get quality honey, it is recommended to use queen excluder (Fig. 13.1 and 13.2) to get super combs without brood. If queen excluder is not used, the queen moves to the super chamber to lay eggs. Honey should be extracted only from the supers and stores in brood chamber should be left for the colony. 2. Use of good combs: It is important to secure good combs for use in the bee colonies to increase their efficiency and quality of produce. Honey stored in old and dark combs becomes darker. Combs older than 3-4 years should be discarded. Best time to raise combs is during honey flow when the bees construct comb fully from top to bottom bar. Poor combs should be removed as and when found. In older combs even queens are reluctant to lay eggs. There are reports which indicate that continuous use of combs for brood rearing results in reduction of cell size which in turn affects the bee size.3. Preventing bee losses: Large number of bees dies due to indiscriminate use of pesticides on the crops. Poisoning of bees occurs due to following reasons: Selection of breeder colonies Breeder colony represents the mother of queens to be raised. The welfare of a colony depends on inherited and physical qualities of its queen because queen transmits to the colony all the characteristics pertaining to disease resistance, longevity, industry, temper, swarming tendency and even excellence in raising combs. Breeder colonies can be selected for: 5. Bee forage management: Bee forage management involves large scale plantations of forage for bees. But it is not economical to a beekeeper to plant forage exclusively for bees. However, plantation of bee forage having other multiple uses too can be undertaken under different programmes. Plantations made on waste lands and as roadside plantations as well as community forestry are some of the examples. Reports of flourishing apiculture after taking up roadside plantations, under social forestry and community plantations in different countries like China, India, Nepal etc. point out to the success of increasing bee forage. The bee forage which is selected for large scale plantations should have some desired qualities like: 6. Adoption of scientific migratory beekeeping: To overcome limits of carrying capacity of different areas, beekeepers migrate their colonies to different potential areas. Thus migratory beekeeping is taken by beekeepers to exploit different honey flow sources or even for providing bee colonies for pollination on rental basis to the orchardists. In India, the commercial beekeeping is at present based on exploiting only honey flow sources and to a limited extent for pollination of apple (restricted to Himachal Pradesh). Colonies are rented out for pollination @ Rs 600-700 per colony for flowering duration of the crop. Benefits of migratory beekeeping |
Last modified: Tuesday, 17 July 2012, 6:52 AM