Waterloo Region Record

Honeybees are busier than we thought

- DAVID HOBSON Reach David Hobson garden@gto.net or by mail c/o Etcetera, The Record, 160 King St. E. Kitchener, Ont. N2G 4E5

Did you know that a good part of your honey may have come from insect poop?

Yes, you heard that right, and I apologize if you’re drizzling honey on your cereal right now. A study of the DNA in honey carried out by Noah Wilson-Rich, an entomologi­st who founded The Best Bees Company, revealed that fact and other valuable informatio­n. The study sampled urban hives in major cities across the U.S. and the preliminar­y results are surprising.

We naturally assume that honey bees are busy collecting nectar and pollen from flowers, and we know they do because we watch them doing it. It’s a biased perception, however, as it’s easy to see the plants that bees are visiting in our gardens. We’ve not been paying attention to what they do at higher altitudes, and that’s one of the major discoverie­s that was made when the DNA in honey was studied.

The main sources of sugar in the honey tested did not come from wildflower­s, but from trees, and not only from the blossoms; it also came from the excretions of sap-sucking insects, particular­ly aphids, those pesky critters that drive gardeners wild when they find them munching away on plants.

What goes in one end of a hungry aphid is the sap that the plant depends on to grow and flourish. Too many aphids and the plant can die. It’s what comes out of the other end of the aphid that attracts the bees. It’s a sweet, sticky substance called honeydew. Besides nectar from flowers, honeybees are slurping up honeydew, and there’s often plenty of it. We might see only a few aphids on plants in our gardens; up in the treetops there can be tremendous numbers — easy picking for bees, and there’s even more food available when a tree is in bloom, far more than in a garden below.

Whether from nectar or from honeydew, the study determined that 75 per cent of the sugar collected by honeybees came from trees, not wildflower­s, especially in an urban setting. Although more native wildflower­s than ever are being introduced into urban gardens to benefit pollinator­s, there’s often a far wider range than is present in a natural, rural area.

In Boston, where interest in beekeeping has grown dramatical­ly, the honey sampled contained the DNA of 411 plant species. Because of this larger diversity of plants, the hives there appeared to be healthier and more productive than rural ones.

Another discovery made by the researcher­s was regarding the types of trees and flowers the honeybees preferred. Surprising­ly, the flowers and trees favoured by them are not necessaril­y native ones. Honey bees don’t seem to care where lunch comes from. Even though coniferous trees are predominan­t in Seattle, the bees there favoured non-native linden and cypress trees.

Preference­s varied from city to city because of the popularity of particular plants in a specific region. For instance, in New York, where even luxury hotels keep rooftop hives, the top three plants were

locust and linden trees, and the flowers of sedum. In Portland, Oregon — known as the city of roses — it’s no surprise that roses were in the top three along with begonias and sweet chestnut trees.

In San Francisco, where non-native eucalyptus trees have become an invasive species, there’s a debate going on whether to fell them or give them protection. The honeybees don’t care that the trees are from Australia. They love them. Making up their top three favourites there are pine trees and rosemary.

Next time you hear buzzing in your garden, remember to look up, way up.

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Check out Grand Gardeners on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ groups/Grandgarde­ners/.

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