Italian bee explained

Apis mellifera ligustica is the Italian bee or the Italian Honey bee which is a subspecies of the western honey bee (Apis mellifera).

Origin

The Italian honey bee is endemic to the continental part of Italy, south of the Alps, and north of Sicily, where it survived the last ice age.[1] On Sicily the subspecies is Apis mellifera siciliana.It is likely the most commercially distributed of all honey bees, and has proven adaptable to most climates from subtropical to cool temperate, but it is less successful in humid tropical regions. Italian bees that originate from the Ligurian alps in northern Italy are often referred to as the Ligurian bee, which is claimed only survives on Kangaroo Island.

Italian bees, having been conditioned to the warmer climate of the central Mediterranean, are less able to cope with the "hard" winters and cool, wet springs of more northern latitudes. They do not form such tight winter clusters. More food has to be consumed to compensate for the greater heat loss from the loose cluster. The tendency to raise broods late in autumn also increases food consumption. Noted beekeeper Thomas White Woodbury first introduced the Italian bee to Britain in 1859, and regarded it as vastly superior to the Old British Black bee (A. m. mellifera).

Anatomy

Characteristics

Brother Adam, a bee breeder and developer of the Buckfast bee, characterized the Italian bee in his book Breeding the Honeybee:

While the Italian bee has many strong points, among the A.m. ligustica it has a large number of weak points:

Strengths

Weaknesses

Foraging behavior

A. m. ligustica are more concerned with nectar processing behaviors, honey storage, and adult maintenance over brood expansion when compared to the African honey bee, A. m. scutellata.[4]

Selective breeding

Breeders of Italian bees, as well as other honey bee subspecies, look for certain beneficial characteristics. Depending on the breeding goal, one or more of the following characteristics may be emphasized:

  1. Gentleness or excitability
  2. Resistance to various diseases including tracheal mite and Varroa mite
  3. Early spring buildup in population
  4. Wintering ability
  5. Tendency to limited swarming
  6. Ability to ripen honey rapidly
  7. Honeycomb cappings are white
  8. Minimal use of propolis
  9. Availability and queen cost
  10. Color

Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20050324170003/http://www.tnbeekeepers.org/pubs/The%20Best%20Bee.pdf George Imrie's pink pages

Worldwide distribution

References

  1. Hybrid origins of honeybees from Italy (Apis mellifera ligustica) and Sicily (A. M. Sicula) . 10.1046/j.1365-294x.2000.00945.x . 2000 . Franck . P. . Garnery . L. . Celebrano . G. . Solignac . M. . Cornuet . J.-M. . Molecular Ecology . 9 . 7 . 907–921 . 10886654 . 2000MolEc...9..907F .
  2. Tarpy, David R.; Lee, Jeffrey A comparison of Russian and Italian Honey bees [North Carolina State University] Extension Service
  3. Brother Adam, "Breeding the Honeybee" (Northern Bee Books: Mytholmroyd, 1987), pp. 96–98.
  4. Fewell. Jennifer H.. Susan M. Bertram. Evidence for genetic variation in worker task performance by African and European honeybees. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 2002. 52. 4. 318–25. 10.1007/s00265-002-0501-3. 22128779.
  5. News: 14 Aug 1914 - BEE CULTURE. 6. Sydney Morning Herald (Nsw : 1842–1954). 20 August 2015. 1914-08-14.
  6. Barrett, P. "The Immigrant Bees, 1788 to 1898", Vols. I-III)
  7. Web site: Ligurian Bees Act (No 342 of 48 and 49 Vic, 1885) .

External links