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Help save the bees!
A blog following the beekeepers at the University of Washington.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Friday, July 20, 2012
HELP SCIENCE HELP THE BEES!
We are a science-based beekeeping course aiming to improve the plight of
bees while training a new generation of beekeepers. The course is sponsored by the Biology Department of the University of Washington, Seattle and the UW Farm*. Our
current projects are listed below. As you can see, we are investigating a diversity of bee topics.
We have a shoestring budget, which limits what we can do, but you can help us by donating through our funding tool:
OUR CURRENT PROJECTS
1. Biology and Processing of Bees Wax
Learn in detail about how bees secrete wax, its functions in the hive, chemical properties and industrial uses, and problems, especially pesticide contamination. Build a solar wax melter and render our collection of recyclable combs. Process the wax in an experiment to remove pesticide residues. Make candles.
2. Mite Monitoring & Management Testing
Learn in detail the biology of the Varroa mite and its management. You will consistently monitor mite populations in hives under various treatment regimes to assess their relative performance. Data will contribute to the series begun in 2011.
3. Hygienic Behavior Assessment
Use a standard freeze-kill method to create a uniform "unhygienic" patch in the brood of colonies of several different strains. Assess the ability of the bees to detect dead brood and remove it. This is a behavioral trait correlated with the ability to clean the hive of disease spores and possibly other problems. This test was developed by professional researchers for breeding more "hygienic" bee strains.
4. Dance Behavior and Forager Mapping
Record foraging dances within the hive and translate into a detailed map of foraging range centered on the Farm apiary. Then, to verify the data, go to one of the indicated sites, set up feeding stations, mark bees that arrive, and try to recover the marks in one of the home hives.
*The UW Farm is a group of University students, faculty, and associates that run an on-campus, food-growing, urban organic farm. The Farm is now growing food for the campus food services! Check out the Farm link and come visit!
What do bees do when it rains? If it's not raining very hard, they may brave the storm and continue to fly out for food. But to them, a raindrop is a bucket full! So when it rains hard, as it did this morning, the bees stay home but crowd the porch and wait for the sun! These gobs of anxious bees are just raring to go! As soon as the rain lets up, they're OFF! Great work ethic -- they have already put up a whole box of honey, even in our cool, wet summer!
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Featured on The Daily: "Braving The Swarm"
We were featured as a part of The Daily's Double Shot.
Take a look at what our classmates, Alex and Russ have to say about the beekeeping internship!
Take a look at what our classmates, Alex and Russ have to say about the beekeeping internship!
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Building a Solar Wax Melter!
For one of our class research projects, we are learning how bees secrete wax and testing wax to learn about pesticide contamination. For this purpose, we built a solar wax melter on Saturday to test old comb we have acquired from the apiary. We will use it to process wax and test pesticide residues. Photos from our work party after the jump.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
An unlikely encounter with a bumble bee nest
- Evan
Welcome to our cozy mess! |
Bumble bee! |
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