DOMESTIC HONEY BEE

A healthy colony may contain 50 to 80 thousand individuals, including 2 or 3 thousand male bees (drones).
lifespan of a Domestic Honey Bee is about 35 days.
Colony Collapse Disorder in domestic honey bees is all the buzz lately, mostly because honey bees pollinate food crops for humans.
We would not be so dependent on commercial non-native factory farmed honey bees if we were not killing off native pollinators. Organic agriculture does not use chemicals or crops toxic to bees and, done properly, preserves wildlife habitat in the vicinity, recognizing the intimate relationship between cultivated fields and natural areas.
While no one is certain why honey bee colonies are collapsing, factory farmed honey bees are more susceptible to stress from environmental sources than organic or feral honey bees. Most people think beekeeping is all natural but in commercial operations the bees are treated much like livestock on factory farms.
It doesn’t appear that those in the organic beekeeping world, including commercial beekeepers, are reporting colony collapse. The problem with commercial operations is pesticides are being used in hives to fumigate for varroa mites and antibiotics are fed to the bees to prevent disease. Hives are hauled long distances by truck, often several times during the growing season, to provide pollination services to industrial agriculture crops, which further stresses the colonies and exposes them to agricultural pesticides and GMOs.
Bees have been bred for the past 100 years to be much larger than they would be if left to their own devices. If you find a feral honeybee colony in a tree, for example, the cells bees use for egg-laying will be about 4.9 mm wide. This is the size they want to build  the natural size.
The foundation wax that beekeepers buy have cells that are 5.4 mm wide so eggs laid in these cells produce much bigger bees. It’s the same factory farm mentality we’ve used to produce other livestock  bigger is better. But the bigger bees do not fare as well as natural-size bees.
Varroa mites, a relatively new problem in North America, will multiply and gradually weaken a colony of large bees so that it dies within a few years. Mites enter a cell containing larvae just before the cell is capped over with wax. While the cell is capped, the bee transforms into an adult and varroa mites breed and multiply while feeding on the larvae.
The larvae of natural bees spend less time in this capped over stage, resulting in a significant decrease in the number of varroa mites produced. In fact, very low levels of mites are tolerated by the bees and do not affect the health of the colony. Natural-size bees, unlike large bees, detect the presence of varroa mites in capped over cells and can be observed chewing off the wax cap and killing the mites. Colonies of natural-size bees are healthier in the absence mites, which are vectors for many diseases.
It’s now possible to buy small cell foundation from US suppliers, but most beekeepers in Canada have either never heard of small cell beekeeping, aren’t willing to put the effort into changing or are skeptical of the benefits. This alternative is not promoted at all by the Canadian Honey Council, an organization representing the beekeeping industry, which even tells its members on their website that, “The limitations to disease control mean that losses can be high for organic beekeepers.” [ref link]
Organic beekeeping, as defined by certification agencies, allows the use of less toxic chemicals. It’s more an IPM approach to beekeeping than organic.
Commercial beekeeping today is just another cog in the wheel of industrial agriculture  necessary because pesticides and habitat loss are killing native pollinators, and vast tracks of monoculture crops aren’t integrated into the natural landscape.
In an organic Canada, native pollinators would flourish and small diversified farms would keep their own natural bees for pollination and local honey sales.
The factory farm aspects of beekeeping, combined with an onslaught of negative environmental factors, puts enough stress on the colonies that they are more susceptible to dying out.
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Sensiworld
Great capture !
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Sylvia!
coffeetea
so pretty! great details.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you coffeetea!
Chris Charlesw...
Great stuff, image and info!
I built a hive years ago but at the time the varroa mite stopped me getting a colony and I never got going. Pity.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Chris! It’s funny you mentioned that, because I’ve wondering about starting up my own beehive colony, but I will have to do more research before just jumping into it.
David Friederich
Magazine quality, Sandy. Wonderful text descripton, too.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you David!
EnVee
I watched a special on tv about CCD and it is an alarming situation. I sure hope it can be ratified, i hope it doesnt get to where it is heading!!
Nice capture :)
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Nancy! I too watched the documentary and that is what inspired me to add that particular information about the Domestic Honey Bee. Why does mankind always feel the need to change things in order to suit him better? Why can’t we think of the consequences before changing things, instead of learning the hard way all the time?
NAPaul
another fantastic photo!! you really do inspire.
Sandy Stewart replied
Oh thank you NAPaul!
Barry Norton
Absolutely fantastic capture, colour and image, Superb in everyway. Great write up, very informative
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much Barry!
Bonnie T. Barry
P E R F E C T I O N! What more can I say? Your work is so good!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much Bonnie!
davidmilne
Brilliant macro work Sandy!!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you muchly David!
Ken Boxsell
Oh Sandy this is gorgeous. Great shot mate
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Ken!
Alf Caruana
A stunning capture with great color and sharp details! and thanks for the descripton
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Alf!
Nira Dabush
OUTSTANDING PHOTO…!! STUNNING MACRO
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much Nira!
Mui-Ling Teh
Great shot. So clear and love the colors.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Mui-Ling Teh!
Jason Connolly
An amazing Macro, so well shot Sandy, I love it.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Jason!
dancinfreakshow
Outstanding Capture!!!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you dancinfreakshow!
hardhhhat
Stunning detail captured here with all that detail on the pollen – busy little bee. Seeing as it’s a domestic bee does it do the hoovering too?
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you muchly hardhhhat!
Torfinn Johann...
Great macro. Wonderful colours, and details.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you so much Torfinn!
Kasia Nowak
Great image
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much Kasia!
Craig Hender
Superb capture! I know how hard it is to get a good shot of these guys ;-). Well done.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you Craig! Yes, they are certainly busy and constantly on the move, so a little bit of a challenge!
bobbymcleod
wonderfully clear shot with rich, yummy colors and indredible detail on the bee!
Sandy Stewart
Thank you Bobby!
okcandids
Beautifully captured.
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much okandids!
www4gsus
This is my favorite shot of yours. I find it great you adding all that text about the subjects in your pics. Good work!!
Cristóbal
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much www4gsus! Happy you also enjoy the information I add! :)
David Lade
Lovely work Sandy. Very clear and colourful!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you so very much David! :)
LisaR
This is an amazing macro shot!!!!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you very much LisaR! :)
Nancy Barrett
This is really quite stunning, Sandy! Every hair and grain of pollen on that bee is sharp…love the dark b/g, too. Straight to my Favourites!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you ever so kindly Nancy! : )
lorilee
Sooooo beautiful!!!
Sandy Stewart replied
Thank you so much Lorilee! : )