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Beekeeping for Farmers

Beekeeping is an agricultural activity that can generate additional income. Honey bees collect nectar from flowers and convert it into honey, which they store in hive combs. Beekeeping requires relatively little investment of time, money and infrastructure. It provides nutritious honey and beeswax for human consumption while helping pollinate crops. To establish beekeeping, farmers can obtain bee swarms and house them in hives, providing feed until they build comb structures and the colony grows. Colonies must be regularly inspected and managed to produce honey, which is harvested from sealed comb cells.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
292 views15 pages

Beekeeping for Farmers

Beekeeping is an agricultural activity that can generate additional income. Honey bees collect nectar from flowers and convert it into honey, which they store in hive combs. Beekeeping requires relatively little investment of time, money and infrastructure. It provides nutritious honey and beeswax for human consumption while helping pollinate crops. To establish beekeeping, farmers can obtain bee swarms and house them in hives, providing feed until they build comb structures and the colony grows. Colonies must be regularly inspected and managed to produce honey, which is harvested from sealed comb cells.

Uploaded by

Sunny Yadav
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

HONEY BEE

PARLOUR
Introduction To Bee keeping
Bee keeping is an agro based enterprise, which farmers can
take up for additional income generation.

Honey bees convert nectar of flowers into honey and store


them in the combs of the hive.

Collection of honey from the forests has been in existence for


a long time. The growing market potential for honey and its
products has resulted in bee keeping emerging as a viable
enterprise. Honey and wax are the two economically
important products of bee keeping.
Advantages of beekeeping as an income generation
activity

1. Bee keeping requires less time, money and infrastructure investments.


2. Honey and beeswax can be produced from an area of little agricultural value
3. The Honey bee does not compete for resources with any other agricultural
enterprise.
4. Beekeeping has positive ecological consequences. Bees play an important role in
the pollination of many flowering plants, thus increasing the yield of certain crops
such as sunflower and various fruits.
5. Honey is a delicious and highly nutritious food. By the traditional method of
honey hunting many wild colonies of bees are destroyed. This can be prevented
by raising bees in boxes and producing honey at home.
6. Beekeeping can be initiated by individuals or groups
7. The market potential for honey and wax is high
Production process
Honey bees can be raised in boxes at the farm or home.

1. Equipment requirements for bee keeping

2. Species of honey bees

3. Establishment of hives

4. Establishing a bee colony

5. Management of colonies

6. Harvesting of honey
1. Equipment requirements for bee keeping

Hive: It is a simple long box covered with a number of slats on top. The rough
measurements of the box should be around 100 cm of length, 45 cm of width and 25
cm in height. The box should be 2 cm thick and the hive must be glued and screwed
together with entrance holes of 1 cm wide. The slats (top bars ) must be as long as the
hive is wide in order to fit across and the thickness of about 1.5 cm is sufficient to
support a heavy honey comb. The width of 3.3 cm needs to be given to give the bees
the natural spacing they need to easily build one comb to each separate top bar.
Smoker : It is the second important piece of equipment. This can be made from a small
tin .We use the smoker to protect ourselves from bee stings and to control the bees.
Cloth: to protect our eyes and nose from stings at the time of work near the apiary.
Knife: It is used to loosen the top bars and to cut of the honey bars.
Feather: To sweep the bees from the comb.

Queen Excluder

Match box
2. Species of honey bees
There are four species of honeybees in India. They are:

Rock bee (Apis dorsata): They are good honey gathers with an average yield of
50-80 kg per colony.
Little bee (Apis florea): They are poor honey yielders and yield about 200-900 g
of honey per colony.

Indian bee (Apis cerana indica): They yield an average honey yield of 6-8 kg per
colony per year.

European bee [Italian bee] (Apis mellifera): The average production per colony is
25-40 kg.

Stingless bee (Trigona iridipennis): In addition to the above, another species is


also present in Kerala known as stingless bees. They are not truly stingless, but
sting is poorly developed. They are efficient pollinators. They yield 300-400 g of
honey per year.
ROCK BEE INDIAN BEE

LITTLE BEE EUROPEAN BEE


3. Establishment of hives

The apiary must be located in well-drained open area,


preferably near orchards, with profuse source of nectar, pollen
and water.

Protection from sunlight is important in order to maintain an


optimum temperature in the hive.

Ant wells are fixed around the hive stand. The colonies must be
directed towards east, with slight changes in the directions of
the bee box as a protection from rain and sun.

Keep the colonies away from the reach of cattle, other animal,
busy roads and streetlights.
4. Establishing a bee colony

To establish a bee colony, bees can be obtained by transferring a wild nesting


colony to a hive or attract a passing swarm of bees to occupy it.

Before putting a swarm or even a colony in a prepared hive, it would be


beneficial to make the hive smell familiar by rubbing old brown comb pieces
or some bee wax. If possible, the Queen bee can be captured from a natural
swarm and placed under a hive to attract the other bees.

Feed the hived swarm for a few weeks by diluting a half cup of white sugar in
half a cup of hot water as this will also help in building the comb along with
the bars rapidly.

Avoid over crowding


5. Management of colonies
Inspect the beehives at least once in a week during the honey-flow seasons
preferably during the morning hours.

Clean the hive in the following sequence, the roof, super/supers, brood chambers
and floorboard.

Observe the colonies regularly for the presence of healthy queen, brood
development, storage of honey and pollen, presence of queen cells, bee strength
and growth of drones.

Look for the infestation by any of the following bee enemies.


Wax moth (Galleria mellonella): Remove all the larvae and silken webbings from
the combs, corners and crevices of bee box.

Wax beetles (Platybolium sp.): Collect and destroy the adult beetles.
Mites: Clean the frame and floorboard with cotton swabs moistened with freshly
made potassium permanganate solution. Repeat until no mites are seen on the
floorboard. Management during lean season
•Remove the supers and arrange the available healthy broods compactly in
the brood chamber.
•Provide division board, if necessary.
•Destroy queen cells and drone cells, if noted.
•Provide sugar syrup (1:1) @ 200 g sugar per colony per week for Indian bees.
•Feed all the colonies in the apiary at the same time to avoid robbing.
•Management during honey flow season
•Keep the colony in sufficient strength before honey-flow season.
•Provide maximum space between the first super and the brood chamber and
not above the first super.
•Place queen excluder sheets in between brood and super chamber to confine
the queen to brood chamber.
•Examine the colony once in a week and frames full of honey should be
removed to the sides of the super. The frames, which are three-fourth filled
with honey or pollen and one-fourth with sealed brood should be taken out
of brood chamber and in its place empty combs or frames with foundation is
added.
• The combs, which are completely sealed, or two-third capped may be taken
out for extraction of honey and returned to supers after honey extraction.
6. Harvesting of honey

Harvest the honey by smoking the bees off the parts which
needs to be harvested and cut the combs carefully.

Harvests are normally possible during and shortly after the


two main flowering seasons, namely October/November and
February-June .

A ripe comb is light in colour and filled with honey. More than
half of the honey cells on both the sides are sealed with wax.
PRODUCTS OF HONEY BEE

1. Honey

2. Bee Venom

[Link]

4. Pollen
[Link]
[Link] Services
There are 3 kinds of honey bee in the Hives--

[Link]- her primary duty is to lay eggs, up to 1500 a day (possibly


more). She also secrets pheromones that keep the workers
happy, queen bee can live for 3-7 years.

[Link]- The drones only duty is to fly out and find a queen from
another hive to mate with once mated, the drone dies.

[Link]- As the name implies the workers do all of the work. They are
non-fertile female bees and they have a very structured life
from the moment they emerge from there cocoons.
Throughout their life they will be nursery bees, construction
bees, storage bees, guard bees. They live on average only 20-
30 days from the time emerge from cocoon.
CONCLUSION
1.

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