Plenty of honey
Field Bee
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2015
- Messages
- 965
- Reaction score
- 15
- Location
- Brittany, France
- Hive Type
- Dadant
- Number of Hives
- 260 + (Nucs and Honey production)
So this has been on my mind. In Certain years, when for instance lime trees exude lots of sap and at the same time they support huge numbers of aphids, So we have bees bringing in Nectar from honey dew as well as nectar from the usual flowers. We might say that that year was a good year! what percentage of this nectar from honey dew and is it measurable.
Does the constant amount of pesticides used annually in the field have an affect on the residual overwintering aphid levels in all areas. I read somewhere that their are some people out there who study these aphid numbers throughout the year.
In the French Alps for example i know there is a crop of "Miellat" which comes exclusively from the pine trees. Millions upon millions of Aphids excrete the honey dew, Some years there is none, other years its a good yield.
Does anyone have any idea of percentages of the crop might be this honey dew nectar (in our areas of England, Northern Europe perhaps) , ratios etc to the years we get it. is is becoming less and less due to constant pesticide usage over large areas.
I would be grateful and interested to find out more about this.
Does the constant amount of pesticides used annually in the field have an affect on the residual overwintering aphid levels in all areas. I read somewhere that their are some people out there who study these aphid numbers throughout the year.
In the French Alps for example i know there is a crop of "Miellat" which comes exclusively from the pine trees. Millions upon millions of Aphids excrete the honey dew, Some years there is none, other years its a good yield.
Does anyone have any idea of percentages of the crop might be this honey dew nectar (in our areas of England, Northern Europe perhaps) , ratios etc to the years we get it. is is becoming less and less due to constant pesticide usage over large areas.
I would be grateful and interested to find out more about this.