Results in of study re feeding bees sugar syrup.

Started by mick, June 01, 2009, 05:23:12 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

mick

THE honey bee is a more efficient pollinator when fed sugar, according to research that could boost Australian agricultural production.

Scientists from New Zealand's Plant and Food Research institute have found that providing a honey bee colony with sugar syrup promoted a change in behaviour in forager bees, which began collecting pollen over nectar.

Honey bees are essential to pollination of fruit and seed crops. "Pretty much all of horticulture and just about all of cropping requires honey bees for pollination," apiculturalist Mark Goodwin said. "By feeding them sugar, the bees in the hive are too busy using the sugar to receive nectar from the workers. This gives the signal that nectar is not needed, so the workers switch to collecting pollen, increasing the amount transferred between plants," Dr Goodwin said.