It’s been a while since I did an update on the status of bee populations.
I have a fun update to share. A new decorative beehive has just been added to the existing White House beekeeping program on the South Lawn, expanding the resident honeybee colonies and their annual honey production.
It’s a buzzzzy time at the White House. First lady Melania Trump added a new, fully functioning beehive in the shape of the White House to the South Lawn grounds, the White House announced Friday, expanding the existing honey production and beekeeping program at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.The new hive will add two new bee colonies to the two current existing colonies producing honey, the White House says, with thousands of bees increasing honey production by about 30 pounds a year. Currently, bees on the property are producing about 200 or more pounds of honey in a productive year. The honey is used at the White House as well as for donations to local food kitchens.The White House executive residence staff designed the hive and its base, which was hand-crafted by a local Virginia artisan, the White House says. The Trust for the National Mall, the nonprofit partner of the National Park Service, is funding the beekeeping program’s expansion.According to the White House, its honey has a light clover and basswood flavor, with citrus notes and is used by chefs in the Executive Residence in teas, salad dressings and desserts.
The White House honey sounds delectable.
As the White House organizes for the 250th anniversary of American independence, it is a great tribute to honey’s role in the Revolution. Honey actually helped colonists dodge British sugar taxes: because honey was produced locally, it became a tax‑free sweetener and even part of “country pay,” where some workers were partly paid in honey instead of cash.
Much like today, beekeepers in colonial America had to constantly fight off pests, mites, and moths, adding tremendous risk to the difficult task of managing bees and harvesting honey. As a result, most beekeepers were not full-time. Instead, farmers treated bees like any other livestock, just like goats, steer and chickens. Properly cared for, they could be a lucrative source of honey, beeswax and mead – sure to make a farmer popular with the neighbors.But their were economic advantages as well. Since honey could be produced locally, it was a rare kind of sweetener that didn’t need to be imported, avoiding the high sugar taxes that were a major cause of the American Revolution. In parts of the colonies, some workers were even paid in honey as part of a simplistic barter system called “country pay.”As the American economy grew, bees became a huge source of prosperity. Honey and beeswax became candles, shoe wax, lipstick, waterproofing, furniture polish, barrels, and medicine.
Finally, some good news to wrap up the latest buzz on bees. A recent report notes that scientists have developed a breakthrough “superfood” for honeybees by engineering yeast to produce the essential nutrients normally found in pollen.
A team of researchers led by the University of Oxford has developed a breakthrough food supplement that could help reverse the alarming decline of honeybees.Working with Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, the University of Greenwich, and the Technical University of Denmark, the scientists engineered a diet that mimics the key nutrients bees normally get from pollen.When tested, colonies fed this supplement produced up to 15 times more young. The findings were published in the journal Nature….Beekeepers often use artificial pollen substitutes made from protein flour, sugars, and oils. These provide calories but lack the sterols bees need, leaving colonies nutritionally deficient.To fill this gap, researchers engineered the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica to produce a precise mix of six essential sterols.
From the South Lawn to the lab bench, it seems the outlook for America’s hardest-working pollinators is now a bit brighter.
Between a White House that’s literally investing in the hive and scientists engineering practical solutions to nutritional stress, we’re seeing the kind of innovation and stewardship that actually makes a difference.
Maybe this will be the one environmental story that may finally have a sweet ending.
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