Nottingham Post

Polite knock could be best way to check on your bees

- By NILIMA MARSHALL, PA

TAPPING gently on a hive and listening to the bees’ collective response can reveal the health of a honeybee colony without needing to look inside, scientists from Nottingham say.

Researcher­s from Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology have found that bees react in unison to soft vibrations on their hives with “positive” buzzing noises.

The team fitted gadgets on eight hives at an apiary in Nottingham­shire to generate short and gentle shakes – simulating the vibrations of a tap.

The honeybees’ responses were recorded using another device, known as an accelerome­ter, inside the hive.

In summer, when bees were busy looking for food, caring for their young and maintainin­g the hive, they paid little attention to the vibrations, according to the team.

However, the insects were more sensitive during winter, when they were less active.

The researcher­s said this was important because bees pause foraging for many weeks during winter so, from the outside, it was not possible to tell if the colony was dead or alive.

While beekeepers can inspect hives by opening them, the scientists said this was invasive and could harm the colony. Lead researcher Dr Martin Bencsik said: “It’s a bit like a bear that falls asleep for the winter. Sometimes you cannot tell if the animal is alive or not.

“A gentle tap, causing a tiny, but measurable, reaction, will reveal whether the animal is in its normal state or not.” There are 600 profession­al and 25,000 registered amateur beekeepers in the UK, the researcher­s say. Dr Bencsik said that in winter, some beekeepers knock on their beehives with their hand to listen for a buzzing response, but “until now, the potential relevance of this simple test had never been looked into carefully”. The researcher­s said their study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, was also the first to show a collective “reflex arc” in invertebra­tes, where a group automatica­lly and unconsciou­sly responds to a stimulus.

Dr Bencsik added: “Our pioneering method also allows us to test for mobility, revealing another aspect of the health and physiologi­cal status of the colony inside the hive.”

He said this non-invasive method can also detect whether the colony is queenless – which can have serious consequenc­es for the hive’s survival.

The researcher­s said they also picked up on a few individual bees making “whooping” noises – which the insects are thought to produce when startled.

Dr Bencsik said: “We believe our work might also help to give beekeepers an indication of the size of their colonies.”

The researcher­s said as part of their next steps, they are going to trial the method with beekeepers in the UK, Belgium, Norway, Holland and Romania.

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 ?? ?? Tapping gently could be the best way to check on the health of bees without opening the hive, inset left, say researcher­s
Tapping gently could be the best way to check on the health of bees without opening the hive, inset left, say researcher­s

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