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Chiapas Diaries: Day 7, Part 2 - The Stingless Bee Workshop, Continued

by: Jill Richardson

Fri Dec 17, 2010 at 12:32:24 PM PST


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This is the eighteenth diary in a series about my recent trip to Chiapas, Mexico's southernmost state, to meet with and learn about the Zapatistas, an indigenous insurgent movement made up of several ethnic groups, and their food and agriculture. On our seventh day, a few members of our group led a beekeeping workshop focused on a few species of tropical stingless bees that are native to this part of Mexico. The bees, Meliponas and Trigonas, are declining in numbers, but their honey is highly medicinal. Mayans traditionally kept these bees and used their honey, but those traditions are being lost.

Previous diaries in this series:
Day 1, Part 1: My Yuppified Introduction to Chiapas
Day 1, Part 2: An Introduction to Zapatistas
Day 2, Part 1: Something's Weird in Zapatista Territory
Day 2, Part 2: Our First Day with the Zapatistas
Day 3, Part 1: A Full Day with the Zapatistas in the Highlands
Day 3, Part 2: A Trilingual, Multicultural Corn Experiment
Day 4, Part 1: Zapatista Agriculture and a Shower
Day 4, Part 2: This Corn Ain't Roundup Ready
Day 5, Part 1: Moi's Rant
Day 5, Part 2: The Students' Orchard
Day 5, Part 3: The Students' Ceremony
Day 5, Part 4: From the Highlands to the Jungle
Day 6, Part 1: The Market in Palenque
Day 6, Part 2: Zapatistas in the Jungle
Day 6, Part 3: The Poster
Day 6, Part 4: The Poster, Continued
Day 7, Part 1: The Stingless Bee Workshop

(I went with the group Schools for Chiapas, an organization that works with and provides aid to the Zapatistas. Check out their website if you are interested in either traveling with them to Chiapas yourself, or simply buying some artisanal goods or coffee produced by Zapatistas. Aside from the obvious politics involved in supporting Zapatistas, you are supporting human beings who live in extreme poverty and work their asses off to educate themselves and their children and provide for basic needs like water and health care.)

Jill Richardson :: Chiapas Diaries: Day 7, Part 2 - The Stingless Bee Workshop, Continued
Yesterday I wrote about the beginning of our stingless bee workshop, which was largely spent getting the kids - the workshop attendees were secondary school students and their teachers, ages 11 and up - excited about the topic. But once that was done, Raquel, who led the workshop, got into the meat of the topic. How does one care for a stingless bee and harvest its honey? And how is stingless bee honey used medicinally? Raquel was very hands on and she had the kids each make a spray for sore throats and a gel to apply to skin infections with the honey.

After the kids finished their skits, Raquel said, "The powers that be put an enormous amount of resources into dominating the planet, all the way down to little insects." She said that here, the native bees pollinate over half the plants in the zone, including trees and food crops, like rambutan and coffee. Meliponas are very important pollinators. She added "We know that people burn bees and chop them with machetes, but it's against indigenous customs to hurt the environment. We sometimes do it to eat, but we don't do just destroy things."

With that, Raquel got into the details of beekeeping. She started by going down the kids' list of questions:

Q: What do meliponas eat?

They eat nectar and pollen from flowers. The nectar is their carbohydrate, and the pollen is their protein. They eat these fresh but they also store them as honey and bee pollen, respectively. She noted here how the bees pollinate flowers as they go about nectar and pollen collection, but did not mention that meliponas use a different type of pollination than European honeybees. Meliponas do buzz pollination, just like bumblebees. Since several New World crops like tomatoes co-evolved with New World bees, they respond well to buzz pollination.

Raquel explained that humans are only interested in eating nectar and pollen that have been gathered by bees. Bee pollen, like you buy in health food stores, has been processed by the bee's saliva already. It's a very nutritious food, and it differs based on which type of flower it's from.

There are bees at the door of the hive that collect the pollen from each bee that comes in. Then the bee puts the nectar she has collected into the honey container by herself. One way to collect bee pollen is to put a trap on the door to the hive that wipes the pollen off the bee as each bee enters, dropping it into a collection container. However, Raquel emphasized, we should ONLY do this during high flowering periods, because otherwise we will kill the bees (since we're stealing their food).

I believe it was here in the workshop when we had our big discussion about pollination. If you can imagine how much an average 11 year old knows about flower anatomy and pollination, well... we had to cover all of that to make sure that everyone was on the same page. Raquel asked the kids what part of the flower the pollen was (comparing it to human reproduction), and she got the kids totally giggling by telling them it's the semen. Then Peter said, "Ask them how to say it in Ch'ol [their language]. Then they'll never forget it!" So someone asked them, and the kids got all embarrassed and wouldn't tell us. "Now we'll tell the whole world that the Ch'oles have no semen!" Peter joked, and the kids laughed even more.

Q: What kinds of bees are in the hive?

For social bees in general (not just meliponas), there is a queen, workers, and drones. A queen lives about five years, and she is five times bigger than the workers. The difference between the queen and the workers is food, since the queen eats royal jelly (which is full of vitamins, protein, and hormones). The worker bees are all girls, all sisters.

The male bees are drones, and they do not do much. They eat and they screw. Once in a very long while, the queen emerges from the hive and goes on a "nuptial flight." During this flight, the drones all compete and try to mate with her. Then she goes back to the hive and lays eggs, which is her main job. The only other thing the drones really do is help maintain the temperature of the hive.

Q: How long do bees live?

As noted above, the queen lives 5 to 7 years. Worker bees live 3 months, according to Raquel. This might be a specific number to meliponas, because I've heard a few different estimates on worker bee lifespan for European honeybees. Recently, a U.S. beekeeper told me that worker bees (European honeybees) live 42 days, although beekeepers fear that lifespan has declined down to 30 days recently. Drones, according to Raquel, live 4 months. (Again, this might be meliponas only.) Raquel added that workers eat honey, larvae eat honey and pollen, and the queen eats royal jelly.

Taxonomy
Remember "Kings Play Chess On Fancy Green Silk"? The taxonomic order that bees are in includes bees, wasps, and ants. Below that, the family that all bees are in is Apidae, which includes all types of bees. There are some 20,000 species of bees, according to Raquel. Within that family, there is a "Tribe" that includes all stingless bees, Meliponini.

Meliponini includes a large number of genera (plural of genus), but we were focusing on only two: Melipona and Trigona. And within that, we were focusing on two species, Melipona beecheii and Trigona mexicana. These two species are domesticated, whereas the others aren't.

In Mexico, there are 46 species of Melipona and Trigona. Of these, 33 species are present in Chiapas. This is in large part because Chiapas has a mountain range running down its middle, dividing the state into a zillion peaks and valleys and, with them, microclimates. Meliponas and trigonas live, by and large, in tropical zones, although some live in the subtropics.

Q: What Makes a Bee Social?
Only 5% of all bee species are social. There are 3 criteria that define a bee as social:

1. Stores food.
2. Shares work.
3. All bees care for all the young in the hive.

Q: Why are Meliponas and Trigonas different from honeybees?
There are a few major differences between Meliponas and Trigonas compared to honeybees. First of all, they have more than one queen, whereas a colony of honeybees will only have one queen. In a Melipona hive, there might be 100 queens - but only one is fertile. The rest are virgins, and they are ready to form new hives. When there are many flowers, a virgin queen might fly off and mate with the drones of many hives (not just her own) and then form a new colony.

Second, honeybees store brood and honey in the same place (cells of the honeycomb). Meliponas do not. They store their honey in little honeypots, each about the size of the top joint of your thumb.

A hive of honeybees make much more honey that can be harvested each year. You can harvest some 35 liters of honey from a honeybee hive, but only 1/2 liter per year from a melipona hive.

And, between melipona and trigona, meliponas are fatter.

At this point, Raquel gave a number of warnings to the kids:

DO NOT:
Paint the hive
Make the hive too big
Harvest honey in the middle of the day
Use a machete to cut open the hive
Leave the top of the hive open
Break the honey pots
Take all of the honey, leaving the bees with nothing
Harvest honey during a time of year with no flowers
Harvest all of the beeswax

DO: Harvest in April and May

(Later, when we made plans to come back and establish the first Melipona colony, we set the date for April, when there will be the most flowers. "We are asking the bees to change their home," Raquel told the kids, explaining why we needed to be very gentle and to do it at a time when it would be easiest for the bees to gather their food.)

At some point, during the workshop, a tom turkey wandered into our classroom, feathers puffed up, and strutted around for about a half an hour, despite several attempts to shoo him. A few chickens, meanwhile, quietly sat under the table I was at. And we could hear howler monkeys in the background. It was quite surreal.


Our friend, the turkey


Chickens

In following the kids' normal school day schedule, we took a break around 11am while the students began preparing the evening meal (they only ate 2 meals a day, which is understandable when you consider how much dang work it is to build a wood fire and then make dried beans and tortillas from scratch). For breakfast, they had beans, tortillas, pasta, and sweetened herbal tea. For lunch, they had beans, tortillas, and rice. Lunch was served around 1pm, and then the kids went to the river to bathe, swim, and do laundry from about 2-3pm. I spent most of this time in my hammock, reading, and hanging out with friends.


Making the fire to cook lunch


Our room, with hammocks hung everywhere


The duck nesting in the room where we stayed

Melipona Honey as Medicine
When we came back together, the herbal medicine experts in our group presented their material. (The turkey, naturally, reported back for class.) Melipona honey is highly antibiotic. It can be used for cataracts, eye infections (like pinkeye), coughs, colds, and various skin infections. The kids made 2 different medicines with melipona honey.

Pomade: To make this, melt beeswax with oil in a double boiler, and add a bit of melipona honey. I would use perhaps 1/8th cup of beeswax, 1/2 cup of oil (olive oil, avocado oil, jojoba oil, coconut oil... take your pick), and I'm not sure how much honey. Once you've melted the wax and mixed everything together, put it in a container (like a glass jar) and let it cool. Use this on cuts/wounds, skin infections, and infected pimples by spreading it on your skin daily.

Throat Rinse: For this, mix melipona honey, water, and mint. (I need to get the proportions for each, and I will add them here once I do.) Then use it for throat infections, sore throats, and a cough with phlegm by rinsing your mouth with it and swallowing it every 4 hours.

The next day, we would go with a small group of students to actually see a melipona hive.  

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The turkey... (4.00 / 2)
He may have heard all that mating talk, and wanted in?

;)

I feel a little better, natural remedy-wise today.  I can understand the sore throat thing!


very possible (4.00 / 2)
he clearly had no idea that some of us were Americans and that it was Thanksgiving.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
35 liters (4.00 / 2)
The difference between 35 liters and 0.5 liters blows my mind. It would be even more startling if the greater thickness of honeybee honey indicates higher sugar concentration.

Can you add more to this part of the discussion? Is 35 liters a number for industrial honeybees trucked from crop to crop for most of the year, while the 0.5 liter number is for bees that stay home? Or do the meliponas pretty much make only what the hive needs, whereas honeybees don't have a "stop" button?


you know (4.00 / 2)
I don't have any idea. This entire workshop was in Spanish, a language I don't speak quite fluently yet, and I didn't have a translator for a chunk of it. I just looked online to see if I could find the website for Raquel's organization (Casa de la Bosque, I think. House of the Forest.) and couldn't find it.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
I can say though that (4.00 / 2)
the standard bee hive is MUCH bigger than the melipona hive size. Not 70 times bigger, but still much bigger.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
I have an idea that european honey bees may produce more (4.00 / 2)
than the meliponas. Perhaps it's like it is with many animals, even within a species, different breeds produce more than others. I'm reminded of the milk produciton of my goats. My little boer probably produce only a couple quarts/day, but Taffy, the big toggengerg will produce maybe 1 1/2 gallons per day, easily enough for her 3 kids and enough to milk and feed to lambs. When I first got her last summmer, I was milking twice/day and getting around 1 gallon per day, and the former owners had already dried off one side of her, so she was only up to about half of capacity.

Also, one reason why the european honey bees produce so much is that they're given more boxes (supers) to build comb and store honey in. I think that if there wasn't extra room they wouldn't produce so much? Or perhaps the hive would swarm?

Just begining my education on bee keeping and what not.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


[ Parent ]
bees (4.00 / 1)
I agree that one species can be expected to produce more than another species, but I can't believe that the difference would extend to 2 cups vs. 9 gallons under similar conditions even given that individuals of one species are larger, hives contain more workers, etc. I don't know beans about bees, but I can imagine this:

Stay-at-home bees need to produce food for all year during one short flowering season, so their honey could be harvested once or maybe twice, and only a fraction of the honey could be harvested. Traveling industrial bees are constantly exposed to lush forage for most of the year, so their honey can be harvested repeatedly, and each time most of the honey can be taken except for the last time before the hives are parked to overwinter.

There must be a big difference between stay-at-homes and travelers, regardless of species.

Another possible consideration is that, although a maliposa hive is smaller, perhaps a maliposa keeper would have many more hives because of all the virgin queens ready to start new colonies at the drop of a hormone.


[ Parent ]
malipona, not maliposa nt (4.00 / 1)


[ Parent ]
Good points about the traveling bees vs the stay at home bees (4.00 / 1)
Makes sense. I don't know what the honey yield of the two would be (european bees) vs european bees in general vs maliponas. I'm assuming that for european bees, the stay at home bees would produce less honey than the traveling european bees.

Probably the best comparison between the two species would be stay at home european bees vs maliponas.

Interesting about the collony collaps syndrome also -

Harold had a friend who had bee hives. This guy had over 100 hives. He never moved his bees, or rarely moved them. He never had any problem with CCD. I always wondered if moving and the associated stress might not be a contributing factor in instances of CCD.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


[ Parent ]
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