fiat500bee
House Bee
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2020
- Messages
- 362
- Reaction score
- 252
- Location
- Nairn, Highland
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2
Hi Niv
thought you may be interested in a footnote David has added to his blog last week as a result of our thread here:
Note added subsequently: There’s an incorrect statement made on the beekeeping forum that I’ve conducted research into the relative benefits of honey or syrup/sugar for winter feeding of bees. I have not, and I did not make a statement claiming I did in a recent talk! I’m a virologist, not a bee nutritionist. If you want to know about bee nutrition, ask Geraldine Wright in Oxford. In fact, as indicated above, I’m not aware of conclusive scientific studies that show that one is better than the other. There are studies – usually cited by ‘natural beekeepers’ – that honey is better, but I’ve not seen evidence that these are in peer reviewed publications or properly controlled. Conversely there are are studies that claim that bees live longer on syrup/sugar, again not backed up with any evidence.
Whether honey or sugar is better is, in some ways, irrelevant. The question should be “Is syrup/sugar good enough to overwinter a colony so that it’s strong and healthy the following season?”.
This deserves a post and I can’t be bothered to follow-up on the beekeeping forum … something for the winter perhaps?
As I write above … show me the proof!
Thank you @elainemary and @fatshark for that update
It shows how carefully you need to consider all advice (about bees) and perhaps indicates a useful area for future scientific investigation. If sugar gets bees through the winter and in any case, they're then programmed to die after starting the next generation, that's fine.... they've been sufficiently healthy. But that still doesn't answer the original question.
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