Honey Bee Products
Background
The science
and art of managing honey bees called apiculture or beekeeping is a
centuries-old tradition. The first beekeepers were hunters, seek-ing out wild
nests of honey bees, which often were destroyed to obtain the sweet reward,
called honey,for which these insects are named. As interest in honey bees grew,
so too did the entomological and biological knowledge needed to better manage
colonies of Apis mellifera. The
innovations that allowed modern beekeeping to arise were primar-ily developed
in the 19th century. The most impor-tant include the moveable-frame hive,
smoker and centrifugal extractor. It is remarkable that these continue to be
the hallmark of the beekeeper a century and a half later (Capinera,
2008) .
Beekeeping can also generate associated industries such as the manufacture
of beekeeping equipment, including bee hives, smokers and protective
clothing. Bees and/or pollination
services
are also traded and may be very valuable. It is mainly bees of the genus Apis
that produce significant quantities of honey and beeswax. Some stingless
bees,
from the subfamily Meliponini, are also exploited for honey. This honey
is highly valued for its medicinal properties.
Objective
To know about
the status of bee keeping and bee products.
To know the
importance of bee products and its economic benefit.
Methodology
This term
paper was prepared by consulting different books, journals, article and papers.
I used to go to library to get reference about the topic of bee products. The
downloaded version of encyclopedias also greatly helped in compiling this
paper. Other PDF files downloaded from internet also helped me much.
Introduction
Apiculture
provides some of the world's poorest people with the opportunity to enhance
their income from the practical and often indigenous skills of beekeeping. The
best known products harvested from bees are honey and beeswax and
selling honey and beeswax offers the best business opportunities
for small scale beekeepers in developing countries. However, other bee products
such as propolis, pollen, bee venom and royal jelly are also
harvested in some countries. With an increasing interest in natural
ingredients and a growing understanding of the medicinal
value and uses of bee products, the demand for these products is expanding.
There is new interest worldwide in the therapeutic values of honey and
propolis.
There are
many ways to add greater value to bee products, such as producing candles or
cosmetics, so it is possible to develop opportunities for small
business enterprises. Adding value to bee products also leads to diversified incomes
and more sustainable livelihoods for vulnerable people in developing countries,
while increasing the availability of natural, healthy and medicinal products
for local and international consumers. Value added items can be made by people
who are not beekeepers, and may create a special opportunity for women to
profit from their traditional skills.
Raw materials
and the bee colony
Since bees do
everything together and pass the collected substances on to each other, called
trophallaxis, substances from the bees’ own saliva, stomach fluids and gland
secretions are continually added. All bee products also contain small amounts
of other bee products. As a result, bee products can be made up of hundreds of different
substances.
Figure 1:
Location of products in a beehive
Honey
• extracted honey
-- liquid honey; honey that has been extracted from the combs
• comb honey --
honey that is in the comb
• chunk honey --
honey that consists of a piece of comb honey immersed in extracted honey
• creamed honey
-- finely crystallized honey
Honey is a
valuable product often used as a foodstuff by humans. It is an energy rich,
easily digestible foodstuff that people understand and enjoy. Because of this,
it is especially valuable for children and the elderly or people who are sick
and may have lost their appetite. A nourishing recipe is honey mixed into a
porridge made of maize meal and ground peanuts. Honey has also significant medicinal
properties and use. In many countries it is essential for use with traditional and
herbal medicines, and there is now increasing interest in the use of honey in
conventional medicine. Honey is valuable for burns and wounds and will help
healing, especially leg ulcers, bed sores and other festering
sores, and reducing the smell from advanced fungating cancers because of
its antibiotic and debriding effect. It can be used to alleviate conjunctivitis
- two drops will dissolve in the fluid of the eye and act as an antibiotic. It
will also relieve sore throats, constipation, coughs and colds and gastritis.
Beeswax
Beeswax is
one of nature's amazing materials. Pure beeswax from Apis
mellifera contains at least 300 different compounds being a
complex mixture of hydrocarbons, a variety of esters and free acids. Human
societies have long valued beeswax. Despite the use of cheaper petroleum based
waxes, beeswax remains the most versatile bee product. It is used for a range
of industrial processes, for instance as an ingredient in many cosmetics, ointments and
pharmaceutical preparations. It is important in batik and other textile work
and central in certain metal casting and modeling processes, as well as wax
foundation for beehives and in candle making. No candle is more beautiful
nor has a more delicious aroma than a lustrous candle made from pure, golden
beeswax. (Wenning, 1999) . A substance made
from six wax glands on the underside of the abdomen of a worker bee used to
make comb; man most commonly uses wax in candle making and art. It also is used
by humans in drugs, cosmetics, and furniture polish
COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF
BEESWAX
Wax in beekeeping and honey
production
Propolis
(Vincent H. Resh, 2003) Propolis is the
material that honey bees and some other bees can collect from living plants,
which they use alone or with beeswax in the construction and adaptation of
their nests. Most of the plant sources are trees and bushes. The material
collected may be a wound exudate (resin and latex) or a secretion (lipophilic
substances, mucilage, and gum). Propolis thus has a much more varied origin
than any other material collected by honey bees. Analyses of various samples
(mostly of unknown plant origin) have shown the presence of over 100 compounds,
including especially flavonoids. A bee that collects propolis carries it back
to the nest on her hind legs. She goes to a place in the hive where propolis is
being used and remains there until her load is taken from her by bees using it.
The propolis is mainly collected in the morning and used in the hive in the
afternoon. Where propolis is available,
A. mellifera uses it for stopping up cracks, restricting the dimensions
of its flight entrance, and other minor building works. Observations on both
tropical and temperate-zone A. cerana indicate that this species does not
collect or use propolis, even in a region where A. mellifera does, but uses
beeswax instead. Propolis is sometimes used by A. dorsata to strengthen the
attachment of the comb to its supporting branch. It is probably essential to A.
florea for protecting its nest from ants. These bees build Bee Products 83two
rings of sticky propolis round the branch that supports the nest, one at each
end of the comb attachment, and may “freshen” the propolis surface so that it
remains sticky and ants cannot cross it. To collect propolis from a hive, the
beekeeper inserts a contrivance, such as a flat horizontal grid having slits
2–3 mm wide that will stimulate the bees to close up the gaps with propolis. On
removal from the hive, the contrivance is cooled in a freezer. The propolis
then becomes brittle, and a sharp blow fractures it off in pieces, which can be
stored for up to a year in a plastic bag. The total commercial world production
of propolis may be between 100 and 200 tons a year. China produces more
propolis (from hives of introduced A.
mellifera) than any other country; some South American countries are next in
importance. Most importing countries are in Europe. Propolis has various
pharmacological properties, partly from its flavonoid content. It is used in
cosmetic and healing creams, throat pastilles, and chewing gum. A few people
(in the United Kingdom about one beekeeper in 2000), are allergic (hypersensitive)
to propolis, and contact with it leads to dermatitis. Stingless bees mix much
propolis with the wax they secrete before they use it in nest construction; the
mixture is called cerumen.
The bees
collect propolis by biting off scraps of the plant resin and packing them into
the pollen baskets on their hind legs. Because it is so sticky propolis
gathering is a slow business. It is only collected when the temperature is
above 18°C and each bee can only carry about 20mg in one journey. Sometimes
bees collect man-made materials of similar consistency such as road tar or
varnish.
Propolis is a
very stable substance, variable in color and composed of resins, waxes,
volatile oils, pollen, vitamins, minerals and plant chemicals especially
concentrated flavonoids, which are active plant-derived essential oils that are
thought to be mainly responsible for the therapeutic properties of propolis.
Over 180 distinct compounds have been identified in propolis with researchers
expecting to find more.
Honeybees use
propolis to keep their homes dry, cosy and hygienic. The propolis coating makes
the walls of their nesting place waterproof and draught-proof. Propolis is
used to seal up any cracks or gaps where micro-organisms could flourish and to
decrease the size of nest entrances, which makes them smooth for passing bee
traffic and easier to defend from intruders. A thin layer is used to varnish
inside brood cells before the queen lays eggs into them. This provides a
strong, hygienic unit for developing larvae while the volatile oils in propolis
serve as a kind of antiseptic air-freshener.
Venom
To defend
their nests and honey stores against many potential enemies honeybees have
developed elaborate defense mechanisms involving pheromones. The most notable
of these is the honeybee's sting. The sting apparatus (and to a lesser extent
the mandibular glands) produce alarm pheromone that stimulate the stinging
response and arouse other worker bees to sting the intruder.
The main
component of the alarm pheromone is iso-pentyl acetate which has a sweet smell
rather like banana oil and is stored in a specially evolved 'venom sac' located
close to the sting shaft. Honeybees store a maximum of 0.5mg of venom during
their lifetime.
Commercially-produced
venom is used medicinally for desensitization of allergic individuals, treating
a range of chronic diseases notably the rheumatic diseases and multiple
sclerosis and for other forms of apitherapy.
Venom is
collected from honeybees using an electrically charged grid with a thin
synthetic material (such as taffeta or clear plastic food wrap) stretched over
it. The grid sits on an integral glass plate. This apparatus is placed at the
bottom of the beehive. When bees alight on it they receive a slight electric
shock causing them to sting through the material leaving a deposit of venom
smeared on the glass plate. The dried venom is scraped off the plate and the
underside of the fabric with a razor blade and then rapidly freeze-dried for
storage.
Royal
Jelly
The quantity
and quality of the food given to a larva while it is developing will determine
its caste. Consequently, a fertilized egg can be made into either a queen or a
worker depending on the type of cell it inhabits and the type of food it is
fed. The food of the queen is called 'royal jelly'. It is produced from the hypo
pharyngeal glands in the heads of the worker bees that are nursing the queen
larva, and differs from worker brood food in containing more mandibular gland
secretions and a higher sugar content (34%) with a different spectrum of
sugars.
Royal jelly
is a whitish, homogenous substance with a paste-like consistency; its principal
components are water, protein, lipids and mineral salts. All the amino
acids required for human nutrition are present along with a number of enzymes,
vitamins and numerous minor compounds.
The idea
that, while the worker bees live for
only a few weeks, the queen lives for
several years, is likely to have generated the myth that royal jelly has
similar effects on people. The fact that workers are sterile while the queen is
fertile may similarly have contributed to people's belief in its aphrodisiac
qualities. There is little scientific data either supporting or disproving
claims made for royal jelly but commercial sales interest will quickly exploit
consumer imagination. In its unprocessed state the taste is not particularly
pleasant, being often quite bitter or sour. However, this may even enhance
its medicinal reputation.
Royal jelly
is always fed directly to queen larvae and is never stored, so it has never
become a traditional beekeeping product. Commercial royal jelly production
relates to the food intended for queen bee larvae that are 4-5 days old. Only
about 250 mgs of royal jelly will be present in a single queen cell so
harvesting significant quantities for human consumption requires large scale
queen rearing which can really only be done using frame hives. It is easiest to
sell royal jelly in its fresh state. However, it does not keep well in this
form so for non-local sales it needs to be frozen or freeze-dried to allow long
term storage and processing into consumer products. For the majority of
commercial usage and sales, royal jelly needs to be in the freeze-dried form
which requires significant investment in equipment. China accounts for the bulk
of world production, estimated at 450 tons, while the health food and cosmetics
markets in Japan, USA and Europe provide the main consumers.
Because of
the very specialist skills demanded, the scale of the enterprise required for
large scale queen rearing, the precise timing and the need for constant
attendance on the queen cells, the difficulties in processing for both storage
and sale, together with the levels of financial investment in industrial
equipment required for commercial royal jelly production, Bees for
Development considers that royal jelly production is not a particularly
suitable income-generating activity for alleviating poverty in most development
circumstances. (Krell R., 1996)
Pollen
Pollen supplies protein to honeybees which is required
for growth and reproduction. It also contains lipids, sterols, enzymes,
vitamins and minerals, sugar, starch and cellulose. The chemical constitution
of each type of pollen is widely variable and it is likely that honeybees
require pollen from a range of floral sources to satisfy their nutritional
needs.
Pollen is carried back to the hive on the third pair of
legs of the honeybee, which is specially modified for this purpose. Pollen is
moistened with saliva and nectar to make a small pellet, or pollen load, which
is carried back to the hive to be stored. Only a tiny amount can be carried
back to the colony at each trip (around 10 mgs per load) and bees need 20
kilograms for their annual development. It is clear that this constitutes a
remarkable feat of social co-ordination by the bees - in fact this takes 1.3
million pollen collecting trips for the colony every year. Pollen is mixed with
enzymes and nectar in a way that allows it to be stored by the bees for a
considerable time.
Each plant has distinctively shaped pollen grain. Many
plants have a characteristic color and this, combined with the time of year it
is collected, can be used to give an initial indication about the source of the
pollen.
Measurement of grain size and examination of other
features can be used to identify pollen grains under the microscope. This
technique, known as melissopalynology, is most usually used to check the source
of the honey to ensure consumers are not being misled about where the honey
comes from.
People sometimes use pollen as a health food because
of its rich source of protein, enzymes, vitamins and minerals. The pollen
is collected from the bee by using a specially designed pollen trap placed at
the entrance of the hive. This removes the pollen loads from the bees' legs as
they enter the hive causing it to fall into a collecting box. Pollen trapping
cannot be done for prolonged periods as loss of their protein source has
serious consequences for the health of the honeybee colony.
However, dust and spores may be collected as well as
pollen, so collecting pollen for human consumption needs to be done with care.
Poorly handled pollen has great potential for becoming mouldy and possibly
toxic. Good sorting and freeze-drying facilities need to be available for
pollen collection to be a viable business possibility.
Bees need pollen for:
- Protein synthesis
- Brood food for larval and queen growth
- Bee bread for larval growth
- Fat bodies for surviving dearth periods
- Wax secretion
- Venom production
Conclusion
The products of the honey bee have
great value in economic return as well as health matters. The honey bee keeping
can give us the diversified products. The most important part of the honey bee
work is the pollination which is ignored by Nepalese farmers with layman
thinking. The 80% pollination the crop is done by honey bee. The pollination by
honey bee has increase the crop production. The other products of the honey bee
are helping in earning a good return. The most precious, more costly and highly
medicinal value product is Royal jelly produced by honey bees. Wax, pollen,
propolis are other products of honey bee. The treatment through Apitherapy is
being popular nowadays which help in the curing in problem of respiration,
blood pressure and rheumatism.