Science, asked by pihuu36, 1 year ago

observations on apiculture​

Answers

Answered by aggarwalnandini73
2

A beekeeper (or apiarist) keeps bees in order to collect their honey and other products that the hive produce (including beeswax, propolis, flower pollen, bee pollen, and royal jelly), to pollinate crops, or to produce bees for sale to other beekeepers.

this is known as apiculture.

hope it helps ;-)

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Answered by pranjalkbr
4

Hey friend here is your answer ⬇️⬇️⬇️☺️

Apiculture is the culturing and maintenance of honey bees, beehives, and bee colonies using man-made methods. These honey bees are grown for extracting honey, beeswax, royal jelly, pollen to pollinate other crops etc.

The most common type of honey bees that were used in the apiculture center was Apis Indica, also known as the common Indian bee. They are known to produce around 6 - 7 pounds of honey per honeycomb.

A few combs of Apis Mellifera were also found at the center, which is also known as the European bee. It was the best used commercial type of honey bee.

From the information given by the center, the lifecycle of the honey bee starts with the queen bee laying the eggs. The eggs hatch into the larvae inside the cells which are fed by the worker bees. The worker bees then seal the cells with wax and the larvae form a cocoon and grow into a pupa. This pupa then grows into an adult bee and leaves the cells.

Two types of beehives were present - Fixed hive and moveable hives. There are wax sheets which attract the bees for preparing the combs. The honey extractor uses centrifugal force to extract the honey from the combs without causing damage to the combs.

Hope it helps you..✌️ by ttyl tc


pranjalkbr: thanks
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