This Document is taken from The Vegan Society web site (www.vegansociety.com)
and is reproduced here to allow me to comment of this rather distorted view of
the beekeepers world.
Bees
are manipulated worldwide to produce many products for human use: honey,
beeswax, propolis, bee pollen, royal jelly and venom.
They are intelligent insects with a complex communication system.
·
Beekeeper:
Agreed
Because
bees are seen flying free, they are also often considered free of the usual
cruelties of the animal farming industry. However bees undergo treatments
similar to those endured by other farmed animals. They go through routine
examination and handling, artificial feeding regimes, drug and pesticide
treatment, genetic manipulation, artificial insemination, transportation (by
air, rail and road) and slaughter.
·
Beekeeper:
Deliberately emotive language…read on…
Queen for a Year or Two
Queen
bees are artificially inseminated with sperm obtained from decapitated bees.
Queens are systematically slaughtered every two years because over time their
egg producing abilities decline so their whole hive becomes unproductive and
uneconomic. In
·
Beekeeper: Virtually
no hobby beekeepers use AI, I have also never heard of sperm from decapitated
bees. “Slaughtering” seems a tad
emotive…. It’s a bee not an intertribal African massacre; get some sense of
priority please. Good queens are
cherished and often kept until the end of their natural lives as their
offspring daughter queens inherit their desirable characteristics.
Bees Crushed
When
beekeepers manipulate combs many bees are crushed and killed. Hives have smoke
puffed into them to calm bees down and make them easier to handle. Special
excluders or devices that violate the bees' space are attached to hives to
collect bee products from bees as they enter hives. Bees are separated from
their hives by being shaken vigorously or jetted out with powerful streams of
air. They may have their legs and wings clipped off. Clipping the wings of
queen bees prevents them from swarming (flying off!).
Swarming
is the natural way for reproduction, increase and survival of the species, at
least in the wild. However, beekeepers are constantly trying to prevent this
natural phenomenon and will use artificial pheromones, wing clipping and cage
queens to keep their colony under control.
·
Beekeeper:
Beekeepers go to great lengths to avoid crushing bees, the pheromones released
causes other bees to get stressed and potentially aggressive. “ Special devices” sounds like torture, the
only ‘device’ used by hobby beekeepers in this respect is a queen excluder
which causes no stress whatsoever it simply keeps the egg laying queen separate
from the upper honey storage area and prevents loss of the queens brood when
honey is removed. Bees are not normally
‘separated’ from their hives at all they are shaken gently on a comb by comb
basis whilst inspecting the bees, typically when you need to check that they
are not suffering from any disease.
Clipping wings is like cutting finger nails it is dead tissue and is not
a necessity but can be uses to reduce to number of visits and disturbance to
the bees when watching out for swarming.
“Beekeepers are constantly trying to prevent this natural phenomenon”
wrong, this is a seasonal occurrence usually occurring in northern
Swarm control
is part of beekeeping but it is futile to ‘make’ bees do anything, they will do
their thing even if that means abandoning hive.
Beekeepers need to work WITH their bees and good swarm prevention is
fundamentally the art of letting the bees ‘think’ they have swarmed and then
they are happy.
Artificial Feed
Beekeepers
feed artificial pollen substitutes and white sugar syrup to colonies, often to
replace the honey that has been removed. If these practices are carried out
over long periods of time they lower hive productivity and lifespan. Colonies
fed on their natural food - honey and pollen - result in larger emerging bees
and more vigorous bees.
·
Beekeeper: Actually it has been shown that the natural
crystallization that occurs in many honey’s stored in comb can cause the bees
stress and dysentery, due to the need to go out and fetch water to dissolve the
crystals during the cold winter weather.
Sugar syrup is purer in that sense as it is stable and a reliable source
of energy, the bees thrive on it as it contains the correct balance of
carbohydrate and water rather than the hit and miss condition of solidified
‘natural’ honey.
Pesticides
Beekeepers
have become dependent on the use of synthetic pesticides and antibiotics to
combat pests, and this has led to problems of toxicological hazards to
beekeepers and bees, and risks of honey contamination.
·
Beekeeper: This I believe is based on an occurrence in
Bees Transported
Bees
are bought and sold worldwide. Transportation means bees may suffer stress, suffocation,
overheating or cold. Many die entombed in their packaged coffins. Exotic bees
are transported to strange countries and causing problems in the natural
environment by spreading disease. They are subsequently treated as feral and
nests are destroyed by pouring petrol in hives or bees killed by spraying with
liquid soap.
·
Beekeeper: “entombed in coffins”- “strange countries”
…please! The hobby beekeeper usually
gets their bees locally and is in no position to ship bees all over the world. Queen bees and small colonies can be sent by
post with attendant worker bees to look after the queen. It is in no ones interest to cause harm to
these wonderful insects and queens are treated as royalty by the awaiting beekeeper.
Moneymaking
In
a bid to improve the economics of honey production in
·
Beekeeper:
Agreed but let’s get it in context. More
people in the same area over the same period have died from dog bites and the
beekeepers in
Pollination
In
many countries bees' services are bought for pollination purposes resulting in
the bees (and their hives) being transported hundreds or thousands of miles.
The food industry is now looking to artificially managed honeybees to provide
to pollinate crops because wild bees and other insects (who would naturally
pollinate crops) have been and are being destroyed by housing development,
industrial pollution, pesticide poisoning, intensive farming practices,
destruction of hedgerows, etc. The use of honeybees for pollination is now big
business especially in places like
·
Beekeeper:
Agreed but did you know that the bees shipped ‘thousands’ of miles only by
commercial USA beekeepers are not locked in to boxes, the hive entrances are left open and given
frequent rest stops and water. Stressed
bees are no good at all for pollination or honey gathering and they are assessed for health and
strength before use by the pollination seeker and any commercial pollinating
beekeeper will not last long without caring for his bees.
Vivisection
Bees
are also victims of vivisection and a vast number of experiments are carried
out worldwide on these creatures. Unfortunately their generally quiet nature
makes the honeybee easily manipulated and it has been claimed that they make an
ideal laboratory animal. Many experiments are conducted for research and
development into colonies that will produce more honey and thus make more
money. In
·
Beekeeper: As the highest form of insect life that can
demonstrate advanced communication and behave as a hyper organism, it is no
surprise that they are a favorite candidate for research. This is hardly the fault of the beekeeper; it
is man’s natural curiosity.
Health Risk
Honey
and other bee products are widely used in folk medicine. However, people with asthma
or allergies have been strongly recommended not to take honey or royal jelly
after several deaths and severe illnesses. Honey is also not suitable for
children under twelve months of age because of the risk of botulism. Bees have
been seen drinking from sewage plants and have been known to collect tar,
adhesives and paint instead of propolis. Moreover, a
nutritional comparison shows that demerara sugar is higher in minerals, such as
potassium, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, copper and chlorine. The
somewhat dubious health benefits of bee products do not warrant the use and
abuse of honeybees. There are many other non-animal alternative medicines
available.
·
Beekeeper:
Well this is honey stuff sure sound’s dangerous to me, and as for demerara sugar
might as well shoot yourself than eat it.
Honey is the model of healthy food and has rightly been so for thousands
of years, picking up on obscure documented or rumored incidents and suggesting
that they are frequent of even normal is grossly unfair.
The reason that botulism is a risk is that the
digestive system of babies is under developed, and a botulism spore that would
harmless pass through older children and adults could case illness in a baby.
Incidentally you can NOT feed demerara sugar
to bees it gives them dysentery as it is actually the dregs of the sugar
refinery industry. But then such facts
spoil a good story.
Basic Bee Info
The
most popular bee for honey production is the European Apis mellifera.
In common with all insects it has a brain and several smaller ganglia
(sub-brains) running through its body. In proportion to its size, the brain of
the bee is very large. The ganglia have nerve fibres
connecting them with the sensory endings on the outer layer of the insect.
Other fibres carry nervous impulses from the ganglia
to the muscles and internal organs, regulating their action.
On
average a colony comprises 42,000-60,000 bees and can survive up to 20 years.
However, the lifespan of individual bees is very short. Within the hive there are
three types of bee: the worker, the drone and the queen. The worker carries out
most types of jobs necessary to keep the colony ticking over including
cleaning, feeding larvae, manipulating the wax, processing the honey and
foraging or defending the colony. Foraging honeybees communicate food sources
to fellow foragers by means of the famous "waggle dance" which
involves an intricate series of circles and movements. After the first 20 days
or so of its life it acts as a forager, or flying bee, collecting nectar and
pollen. The life of the worker lasts about 30 to 35 days. As far as is known
the drone's only function is to mate with the queen bee, after which it dies.
Under wild conditions the queen lives for five years or so. She has two main
functions in life: to mate and lay eggs. She is a very important part of the
colony because she passes on her characteristics and controls its size by the
number of eggs she produces.
·
Beekeeper:
Close… bee colonies are typically well below 40,000, 60,000 is just fisherman’s
tales. Wild (feral) colonies have been
known to last for longer than 20 years some have been in church towers for
generations. Varroa has put an end to
this and only beekeepers can now keep bees alive and in itself makes beekeeping
a worthwhile pastime.
The rest of this document is more factual than
contentious…I need a drink J …
Bee
Statistics
The
honeybee will fly about 800km in her working life and produce just half a
teaspoon of honey. A queen may produce half a million eggs in her natural lifespan.
However, she will only be allowed to live 2 years in the commercial world
producing 150,000 eggs annually during this time. In calm conditions the
foraging bee will travel at 24 km per hour and up to 40 km for short periods of
time and work for 7 - 10 hours a day.
Some
300,000 tonnes of honey are traded internationally
every year, and about four times this much is actually produced. The five major
honey producers in the world are the former
Around
22,000 million tonnes of honey is consumed in the
Bee Products
Honey
Pre-digested
food made by bees from nectar. The bees collect the nectar from flowers and
store it in their primary or honey stomach. Here it is partially digested and
converted into the substance we call honey. It is a food source of the bee and is
stored in the hive for the lean winter months. The metabolism of honey by the
bee creates heat, which maintains the temperature of the hive at 17-34 degrees
C. The colony requires approximately 200 lbs of honey a year to survive. It is
used by humans as a food, as a medicine and in cosmetics and toiletries.
Beeswax
Secreted from eight small wax glands underneath the
abdomen of the bee. The soft wax pours into eight pockets beneath the glands where it
solidifies. It is then removed and passed to the mouth where it is worked into
hexagonal cells called combs, which are used to form the basic structure of the
hive. It is used in cosmetics, toiletries, pharmaceuticals, polishes and
candles.
Propolis
A resinous
substance gathered by bees from trees. It is used to fill holes, and varnish
and strengthen the hive. Bees also use it as a natural antibiotic, antiviral
and antifungal agent. It is gathered by humans by either scraping it off the
hive or collecting it on specially made frames. It is used as a medicine and
food supplement. It is sometimes called 'bee glue'.
Bee Pollen
Collected
from flowers and brought back to the hive as a load on the hind legs. It is a
food source for the bee and is stored in the hive. A colony requires
approximately 60lbs of pollen per year to survive. The collection of pollen
involves fitting special traps to the hive. These scrape it off and are just
big enough to allow the bee through. Bee pollen is used as a food supplement.
Royal Jelly
This
creamy-white sticky fluid is a blend of two secretions from the glands of the
worker bees. It is the sole source of nourishment for the queen bee throughout
her life. Since royal jelly enables the bee to become a queen, some people
believe they can recapture their lost youth by eating it.
Venom
The sting of the bee. Its collection involves the
stretching of an electrically-charged membrane in front of the hive. When the
bees fly into it they receive an electric shock and sting the membrane, thus
depositing the venom. Venom is prized by some for its supposed medicinal
qualities.