Bees for Development Store My Account  Cart Contents  Checkout  
  Top » Catalog » Beekeeping & honey hunting » Asia » My Account  |  Cart Contents  |  Checkout   
Categories
Bookings for BfD events
DVDs & videos
Support BfD Trust
Apitherapy
Beekeeping & honey hunting->
  Africa
  Americas
  Asia
  Development
  Europe/North America
  History
  Hive construction
  Management
  Middle East
  Pesticides
  Reference
  Tropics & subtropics
Bees->
Beeswax & honey->
Education
Enterprise
Gift ideas->
Journal
Melissopalynology
Pathology->
Plants & trees->
Pollination
Venom & bee stings
Wider interest
What's New? more
Video - Honey Hunters of the Blue Mountains
Video - Honey Hunters of the Blue Mountains
£20.00GBP
£10.00GBP
Quick Find
 
Use keywords to find the product you are looking for.
Advanced Search
Information
Shipping & Returns
Privacy Notice
Conditions of Use
Contact Us
Asian honey bees: biology, conservation and human interactions £40.00GBP

Benjamin P Oldroyd and Siriwat Wongsiri 2006 360 pages (O200)

This is an important text summarising in one volume current scientific knowledge about the Asian species of Apis. Apis mellifera, the honey bee species indigenous to Africa, the Middle East and Europe has been studied intensively, to the extent that even its genome sequence is known. However, the genus Apis, evolving over 35 million years, consists of more than just mellifera: at least eight more species exist, and these are in Asia.

During only the past 20 years has the world’s bee research community focussed on these Asian species, interest first being aroused when the predatory mite Varroa was introduced to Apis mellifera populations, and it became important to understand how the mites’ natural host species (Apis cerana) copes with these predators. The first Chapter is ‘To be a honey bee’, and introduces the genus Apis. The next describes the three subgenera: Micrapis (Apis florea and Apis andreniformis), Megapis (Apis dorsata and Apis laboriosa) and Apis (Apis cerana, Apis koschevnikovi, Apis nuluensis, Apis nigrocincta, and Apis mellifera), their distribution and distinguishing features.

Chapter 3 describes their evolution; Chapter 4 covers speciation and biogeography; Chapter 5 describes dance communication and foraging; Chapter 6, Reproduction, swarming and migration, explains that tropical races of bees abscond and migrate. The migration of the Megapis bees is one of nature’s mysteries: microsatellite DNA fingerprinting has shown that colonies of Apis dorsata in Borneo return to the same building or tree where they nested in previous years; how they do it is not yet known, although possible explanations are outlined here. Chapter 7 discusses worker sterility, kin selection and polyandry, and Chapter 8 covers nesting biology and defence, an area in which the different species have adopted markedly different strategies. Chapter 9 is named ‘Parasites, pathogens, predators and a plant’ – the plant in question being a Cymbidium orchid that attracts Apis cerana drones, yet provides them apparently with no reward for the pollination they bring about. Chapter 10 describes human interactions with these bees, and Chapter 11 discusses their conservation: including interesting explanation of how to estimate whether honey hunting might be sustainable. The final Chapter outlines future research directions, and a useful key for identification is also provided.

As Thomas Seeley puts it in his foreword to the book: ‘We humans now recognize that our own species is exquisitely adapted to the razor-thin biosphere covering the planet: hence our own survival depends on understanding and protecting the rest of life.’ This excellently researched, well-written and readable book will help everyone interested in the biology and behaviour of honeybees to understand and appreciate much more about how these amazing insects have evolved to suit different environments.

This product was added to our catalog on Monday 10 July, 2006.
Reviews
Customers who bought this product also purchased
Bees and rural livelihoods
Bees and rural livelihoods
Observation hives
Observation hives
The hive and the honeybee
The hive and the honeybee
Shopping Cart more
0 items
Notifications more
NotificationsNotify me of updates to Asian honey bees: biology, conservation and human interactions
Tell A Friend
 
Tell someone you know about this product.
Reviews more
Write ReviewWrite a review on this product!
Languages
English Deutsch Español
Currencies
About PayPal
Solution Graphics

Copyright © 2008 Bees for Development Store
Powered by osCommerce

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments...