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Honey hunting

 

Opportunistic honey hunting is as old as humankind. The earliestrepresentations of bees and their nests are known from rock art dating back to the Palaeolithic around 15,000CE. Honey is valuable and the process of harvesting it fraught with danger. This has led to diverse myths and legends, folklore and stories surrounding honey hunting.

 

The dense forests and steep escarpments of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (NBR) with their abundance of flora and fauna provide the ideal environment for the giant honey bee (Apis dorsata). The people living here have a tradition of honey hunting and are renowned for their bravery and skill using basic equipment to scale high trees and cliffs. The varying methods used by local groups have given rise to specific honey gathering territories. Collecting this honey is a spiritual affair requiring mental and physical preparation and purification. 

 

 The Himalayan honey bee (Apis laboriosa) similarly plays an important part in many mountain livelihoods and cultures as well as having a critical role in pollination. However, neither their biology nor their role in mountain biodiversity are well understood. In the high mountain areas of Nepal, the continued existence of these honeybees are threatened by changes in habitat and by human interference, with the consequent loss of indigenous culture and knowledge in honey hunting communities.

 

In the tropical forests of the Philippines and Malaysia honey gathering, mainly from Apis dorsata, still takes place and local honey can be found for sale along the roadside although the forests are increasingly threatened by human encroachment and destructive activities including charcoal burning and illegal logging. Nonetheless, the honey hunter remains an esteemed character embodying bravery, skill and knowledge. In Vietnam and Cambodia Apis dorsata is kept using a special style of using rafters which forms one of a number of intermediate methods of honey bee management between honey hunting and beekeeping.

 

In Africa, the North Western Province of Zambia emerged as the "Honey Province" because of its historical tradition of trading beeswax, its remoteness, and its vast miombo woodlands. For many generations the collection of honey from wild bees' nests and later from bark hive beekeeping have been part of village life and has later been transformed into one of the most successful honey production enterprises in Africa.

 

The Ogiek tribe in the Rift Valley of Kenya is one of the few remaining hunter-gatherer peoples in East Africa. Honey plays a central part in Ogiek society being used for food, beer brewing and trade. As well as honey hunting, people also use beehives of hollow logs placed in tree branches. The Ogiek have been struggling for many years to resist eviction from their ancestral home in the Mau mountain forest and to protect it from settlers, loggers and tea plantations.

 

Honey hunting plays a significant role in societies that practise it, often providing vital sustenance in times of famine. Whole colony collection means that high protein components such as brood, royal jelly and pollen form important dietary constituents.

 

 

List of Articles available on this topic (23):


Title

Author

Bees, Biodiversity & Forest livelihoods in the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve

Bees for Development

Decouverte de l\'abeille Apis dorsata (l\'abeille geante) a Siem Reap (Cambodge)

SEPHANE,D.; GUIBAULD,S.

Development of beekeeping in Laos - various strategic choices

Sengngam, B. & Vandame, J.

Eco-friendly harvesting of rock bees (sustainable Apis dorsata honey hunting)

Paliwal, G.N.; Paliwal, S. & Tembhare, D.B.

Hioney hunters of the Nilgiris: the road to sustainability

Roy, P. John, M. and Nath, S

Honey badgers vs Beekeepers in South Africa

Begg, C. and Begg, G.

Honey gatherers of India, Nepal and Bangladesh

Kakani, M

Honey Hunters and Beekeepers: A Study of Traditional Beekeeping in Babati District, Tanzania

Ntenga, G.M. & Mugongo, B.T.

Honey Hunters of Nepal

Valli, E. & Summers, D.

Honey hunting

Mclean, I.

Honey hunting in the Nilgiri biosphere reserve

Sharma, K.

Honeyhunters & Beekeepers of Tamil Nadu: A Survey Document

Keystone

How to find wild bees

Hertz, Ole

Hunting for Honey: Adventures with the Rajis of Nepal

Valli, E.

Marketing Honey and Beeswax from Apis dorsata in West Kalimantan

Mulder, V.; Heri, V.; Wickham, T.

My Day-long Journey into the Northern Thai Jungle, for Honey

Pangaia, J\'aime ona

Nature conservation is a thread woven well through forest beekeeping

Leo, R.

Preserving the biodiversity of wild bees and supporting the traditional Honey Gatherers

Kakani, M

Raftering: A traditional technique for honey an wax production from Apis dorsata in Vietnam

Chinh,P.H. Minh, N.H. Thai, P.H. and Tan, N.Q.

The honey hunter of Southern Africa

Guy, R.D.

The honey trees of the Cholanaickens

C.S. Saneesh

The King and the honey hunters

Mardan, M

Threats to Malaysia\'s bee trees

Bees for Development