The stingless bees are the most diverse group of highly social bees and are key species in our planet’s tropical and subtropical regions, where they thrive. In Mexico, the management of stingless bees dates back centuries, and they were an essential part of the culture and cosmogony of native peoples like the Maya. In recent decades a vast amount of information has been gathered on stingless bees worldwide. This book summarizes various aspects of the biology and management of stingless bees, with special emphasis on the Mexican species and the traditions behind their cultivation. Much of the information presented here was produced by the author and the team of researchers at the Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán in the course of three decades of working with these insects. Given the breadth of its coverage, the book offers an equally valuable reference guide for academics, students and beekeepers alike.
This is the most comprehensive book available on Mexican species of stingless beesIt addresses the biology, management and conservation of these important insects for Latin America and the world at largeThis book draws on extensive scientific evidence and offers an important reference guide for different audiences
This is the most comprehensive book available on Mexican species of stingless bees It addresses the biology, management and conservation of these important insects for Latin America and the world at large This book draws on extensive scientific evidence and offers an important reference guide for different audiences
José Javier G. Quezada-Euán
Meliponiculture Crop pollination Chemical communication Task partitioning Social insect Entomology
“This book is a real first. It is highly illustrated with color photographs, bringing readers step by step into external and internal bee anatomy and pollination ecology … . Hope blossoms due to the efforts of Quezada-Euán and the biologists, beekeepers, conservationists, educators, anthropologists, and business-minded naturalists (such things matter deeply) who will find the book authoritative and use it to move forward.” (David Ward Roubik, The Quarterly Review of Biology, Vol. 94, September, 2019)
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