Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Honeybees Essays - Beekeeping, Beeswax, Bee, Honey Bee, Worker Bee
  Honeybees  Honeybees as a Resource Honeybees are very useful to humans. As their  name suggests, they make the sweet, delicious treat known as honey that we  enjoy. They also make beeswax from which we make many useful items. But the most  important thing bees do for us is to pollinate the plants. The honeybee visits  flowers, which secrete a sweet liquid called nectar. This water-like nectar is  sipped from the blossoms by the bee and carried to the beehive. The raw nectar  goes into the cells in almost the same condition as it was when the bee sipped  it from the flowers. It is inside the hive that house bees evaporate the nectar  down to the thick consistency, which is what we know as commercial honey. We  usually think of the main use of honey as a spread on bread, pancakes or  biscuits. However, honey has a large use in cooking; such as pastries, canned  foods, milk drinks, desserts, frostings, syrups, and salad dressings. Honey  contains simple sugars and does not require digestion like regular sugar, so it  is useful for quick energy pick up and even for diabetic people. Most honey is  sold as extracted honey but it is also sold on the honeycomb which is the wax  chambers the bees make in the hive in which to store the honey. The wax comes  from a worker bee's belly when she is fourteen to twenty-one days old. The wax  chambers are just big enough for a bee to crawl inside. Sometimes people like to  eat honeycomb. It can be eaten on toast or as is; then the wax becomes like a  chewing gum, but like chewing gum it should not be swallowed. In recent years a  new process called the Dyce process has made it possible to make a very nice  granulated honey called creamed honey, which is gaining in popularity. However,  granulated honey is not used much commercially because it is still an almost  unknown honey product. Beeswax is the second most important product produced by  the honeybees. Beeswax, the earliest of waxes, has been used in the form of  candles for lighting. This is today the second largest use of beeswax. The Roman    Catholic Church used to require that pure beeswax candles be used in church but  as the numbers of churches grew there wasn't enough beeswax available so that  now the Catholic Church requires that candles are at least 51 percent beeswax.    The reason the church requires beeswax candles is because the candles do not  smoke. Probably the largest user of beeswax today is the cosmetic industry.    Beeswax is used as the emulsifying agent in face creams, lipsticks, lotions and  rouges. It is also used in shoe polish, sporting goods and military hardware.    The beekeeper himself is the third largest user of beeswax, which he gives to  the bees as the base of their new comb. There are 70 or more commercial uses of  beeswax today. Each year in the United States some 200 million pounds of honey  and four to six million pounds of beeswax are produced. Honeybees are not the  only insect that pollinates plants, but they are the best. A lot of our food,  such as corn, tomatoes, peas, squash, strawberries, apples, pears, and  watermelon would not continue without this pollination. During the last three  weeks of a worker bee's life, they fly out of the hives as a forager. The bees  take pollen and nectar to the hive and deposit it into cells. During a foraging  trip each individual bee will collect pollen from just one kind of plant. By  doing this, each bee helps pollinate the blossoms. When the bee crawls around on  the blossom, the pollen (containing male plant reproductive cells) clings to  fine hairs located on the bee's legs. The pollen is carried from one blossom to  another blossom of the same kind of plant, where it sticks to the female part of  the flower. Without pollination plants would not produce fruit or seeds. Without  seeds now new plants could grow. Pollen is carried in small pollen baskets on  the outer sides of the bees legs. In order to fill the baskets with pollen, the  bee uses her mouth parts and scrapes the pollen from the blossoms and hairs on  her leg to secure it in the basket. The pollen is also known as "bee  bread." This is because the bee eats the pollen. When bees find a good  supply of food they use "sign language." They return to the hive and  perform a dance    
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