Caucasian honey bee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Caucasian bee
Conservation status
Secure
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: Apocrita
Family: Apidae
Subfamily: Apinae
Tribe: Apini
Genus: Apis
Species: A. mellifera
Subspecies: A. m. caucasica
Trinomial name
Apis mellifera caucasica
Gorbachev, 1916

The Caucasian honey bee is a sub-species of the Western honey bee.

Contents

[edit] Origin

The Caucasian honey bee originates from the high valleys of the Central Caucasus.

[edit] Anatomy and Appearance

  • Shape and Size: similar to A. m. carnica
  • Chitin Color: dark with brown spots at times
  • Hair Color: lead-grey
  • Tongue Length: up to 7.2 mm

[edit] Behavior

[edit] beneficial for beekeeping

  • gentle and calm on the comb
  • ardent brood production - raising strong colonies
  • colonies reach full strength in mid-summer, which is good for areas where the highest nectar flow is in mid-summer
  • very great user of propolis
  • in its native area a better honey producer than the European dark bee

[edit] not beneficial for beekeeping

  • colonies do not reach full strength until mid-summer, which is an undesirable trait for areas with the highest nectar flow in the spring.
  • the great use of propolis may be seen as undesirable as it makes hive management more difficult. Frames and hive boxes are glued together more substantially.
  • over wintering in northern climates not good due to susceptibility to nosema
  • inclined to drifting and robbing

the mouth length of caucasian bee is maximume and it is 7.70

[edit] Source

The Hive and the honeybee, Chapter 11 Races of bees by Prof. Friedrich Ruttner, published by Dadant 1975

Languages