Asiatic honey bee and I

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Asiatic honey bee and I. “Eddie” Hang Chio, Ph.D. Applied Sciences Professor Dept. of Entomology National Taiwan University. 招衡. Asiatic honey bee , Apis cerana They are cousins of Apis mellifera but noticeable smaller. Distribution of Apis cerana. Macao. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Asiatic honey bee and I

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Asiatic honey bee and I

“Eddie” Hang Chio, Ph.D.

Applied Sciences Professor

Dept. of EntomologyNational Taiwan University

招衡

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Asiatic honey bee, Apis cerana

They are cousins of Apis mellifera but noticeable smaller

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Distribution of Apis cerana

It can be found in southern and southeastern Asia, such as China, India, Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Papua New Guinea.

Macao

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Unique Characters of Apis cerana

They form smaller colonies Absconding behaviorNest defenseNest thermoregulationThermal defenseMajor Pests

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They form smaller colonies Apis cerana forms smaller colonies that hardly

fill up a single brood chamber.

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Absconding behavior

Absconding behavior means that these species abandon the current nest and move towards new location where there is abundant nectar and pollen supply available and again build new nest.

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Nest defense

Apis cerana are more inclined to retreat inside than to attack an intruder passing near their nest.

Incense sticks instead of smokerare good enough to calm down the hive and no protective veil orclothes are needed.

Thermal defense

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When an Apis cerana hive is invaded by the Japanese giant hornet about 500 Japanese honey bees (A. cerana japonica) surround the hornet and vibrate their flight muscles until the temperature is raised to 47 °C (117 °F), heating the hornet to death, but keeping the temperature still under their own lethal limit (48–50 °C). European honey bees (A. mellifera) lack this behavior.

http://educatedearth.net/video.php?id=2765

Pests

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Apis cerana exhibits more careful grooming than A. mellifera, and thus has an effective defense mechanism against Varroa.These local bees have few pests except the toad that can devastate a colony over night.

Second generation bee keeper become Entomologist

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My father started beekeeping in 1950 and kept bees for over 30 years.

Eddie Chio in Macao in 1964

Second generation bee keeper become Entomologist-cont.

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I spent many weekends helping my father caring the bees when I was in high school. I believe that was why I majored in Entomology at the National Taiwan University (BS and MS) and at the University of Illinois (Ph.D)

Second generation bee keeper become Entomologist-cont.

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In 1971, I was studying honey bee’s behavior at the Department of Plant Pathology and Entomology, National Taiwan University. A phone call from the President Chiang’s office injected unexpected excitement into my young Entomology career.

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan

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In 1971, Chef Chan from the Shilin Official Residence ( 士林官邸 ) contacted the administration of the National Taiwan University for honey bees.

Two dear associates of President Chiang Kai-Shek

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Chef Chan

Captain Kao

President Chiang needs honey bees

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Administration of the National Taiwan University

College of Agriculture

Dept. of Plant Pathology and Entomology

Division of Entomology

Eddie Chio

Chef Chan

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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Chef Chan told me that, President Chiang did not trust any honey from the market and decided to harvest his own honey from his own bees. They took 2 hives out of my 4 and told me they would keep bees at the Shilin Presidential residence.

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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Shilin Presidential Residence(AKA Shilin Official Residence)

Taiwan

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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I ended up caring for President Chiang’s bees at the Shilin Presidential Residence from 1971 to 1972.

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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The Shilin Presidential Residence, stretching 9.28 hectares, was heavily militarized, fortified, and closed to the public until 1996

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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From the entrance to the garden, it was approximately only 200 yards but there were military bunkers and blockhouse. I must be one of the few civilians, if not the first one, allowed inside this Presidential Residence in the early 70s.

Blockhouse in front of the residence

Keeping bees for President Chiang Kai-Shek in Taiwan-cont.

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Inside the barracks, there were army of tradesmen. All bee keeping equipment were made by them.

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Flowers were everywhere, bees were busy.

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Two hives were placed behind this house

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In 1972, couple hundred pounds of honey were extracted. As you know, honey is very good for constipation, but consuming too much honey at one time could trigger diarrhea. I was worry sick about such side-effect on the old and feeble President. He was 85 at that time.

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Shilin Official Residence opened for public since 1966. It is now one of the best gardens in Taipei and becomes very popular during the weekends.

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Personal notes about Bee Keeping

Bee Keeping opened up many doors for me including my Entomology career and a unique opportunity to care for the royal bees in Taiwan

Bee Keeping connects me well with my father

Bee Keeping is a journey not a destination

Bee Keeping is more art than science

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Acknowledge: Thanks for Jerry and Tracy for the arrangement and your attention