April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association

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April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
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April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
Capital Area Beekeepers Association

                    NEWSLETTER
          www.CABAinfo.org                                                     April 2019

          CABA OFFICERS, BOARD OF DIRECTORS, AND APPOINTMENTS FOR 2019

President: Karly Ridgell -     (504) 220-0295     Board Member: Bobby Frierson -        (225) 241-6132
V. Pres.: Geoffrey Badeaux - (225) 330-9825       Board Member: Leo Hill -              (225) 381-9532
Secretary: Demetria Bell -     (225) 572-4468     Board Member: Orie Henson- apiarist (225) 755-2225
Treasurer: Jacquie Hoover -    (985) 507-6604     Board Member: Gary McKenzie -         (225) 751-1751
Librarian: Louis Clements -    (225) 687-4663      Board Member: Chris Thayer -         (225) 413-6970
Editor: Stuart Herrmann -      (225) 405-6514     Board Member: Kevin Langley -         (504) 669-6830

                              CABA MONTHLY MEETING CALENDAR

    The Capital Area Beekeepers Association meets at 7:00 PM. The next meeting will be Tuesday April
2, 2019 at the Louisiana Resource Center for Educators (LRCE), 5550 Florida Boulevard, Baton Rouge,
Louisiana. The Department of Agriculture and Forestry will be giving a lecture on their apiary programs.

                                             NOTICE
   Please contact Stuart Herrmann at roch51@cox.net to provide articles to be published in our monthly
newsletter. An electronic version of the CABA newsletter is available on our club website. For past
newsletters check in the Newsletter Archive on our website: www.CABAinfo.org.
   You can also follow on Facebook, @ CapitalAreaBuzz. For website or Facebook related questions
contact Geoffrey Badeaux at Geoffrey.Badeaux@gmail.com

                                CLUB VIDEO AND DVD RETURN
    CABA has an informative library of videos and DVDs on beekeeping topics for members’ use. Please
get in touch with Louis Clement at our next meeting to return or borrow material. Contact Louis Clement
at 225-687-4663.
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
From Michelle Orillion:

The Secret Life of Bees
The world’s leading expert on bee behavior discovers the secrets
of decision-making in a swarm
By Carl Zimmer
Smithsonian Magazine
March 2012

On the front porch of an old Coast Guard station on Appledore Island, seven miles off the southern coast
of Maine, Thomas Seeley and I sat next to 6,000 quietly buzzing bees. Seeley wore a giant pair of silver
headphones over a beige baseball cap, a wild fringe of hair blowing out the back; next to him was a video
camera mounted on a tripod. In his right hand, Seeley held a branch with a lapel microphone taped to the
end. He was recording the honeybee swarm huddling inches away on a board nailed to the top of a post.

Seeley, a biologist from Cornell University, had cut a notch out of the center of the board and inserted a
tiny screened box called a queen cage. It housed a single honeybee queen, along with a few attendants.
Her royal scent acted like a magnet on the swarm.

If I had come across this swarm spread across my back door, I would have panicked. But here, sitting next
to Seeley, I felt a strange calm. The insects thrummed with their own business. They flew past our faces.
They got caught in our hair, pulled themselves free and kept flying. They didn’t even mind when Seeley
gently swept away the top layer of bees to inspect the ones underneath. He softly recited a poem by
William Butler Yeats:

I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee,
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

A walkie-talkie on the porch rail chirped.

“Pink bee headed your way,” said Kirk Visscher, an entomologist at the University of California,
Riverside. Seeley, his gaze fixed on the swarm, found the walkie-talkie with his left hand and brought it
to his mouth.

“We wait with bated breath,” he said.

“Sorry?” Visscher said.

“Breath. Bated. Over.” Seeley set the walkie-talkie back on the rail without taking his eyes off the bees.

A few minutes later, a honeybee scout flew onto the porch and alighted on the swarm. She (all scouts are
female) wore a pink dot on her back.
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
“Ah, here she is. Pink has landed,” Seeley said.

Pink was exploring the island in search of a place where the honeybees could build a new hive. In the
spring, if a honeybee colony has grown large enough, swarms of thousands of bees with a new queen will
split off to look for a new nest. It takes a swarm anywhere from a few hours to a few days to inspect its
surroundings before it finally flies to its newly chosen home. When Pink had left Seeley’s swarm earlier
in the morning, she was not yet pink. Then she flew to a rocky cove on the northeast side of the island,
where she discovered a wooden box and went inside. Visscher was sitting in front of it under a beach
umbrella, with a paintbrush hanging from his lips. When the bee emerged from the box, Visscher flicked
his wrist and caught her in a net the size of a ping-pong paddle. He laid the net on his thigh and dabbed a
dot of pink paint on her back. With another flick, he let her go.

Visscher is famous in honeybee circles for his technique. Seeley calls it alien abduction for bees.

As the day passed, more scouts returned to the porch. Some were marked with pink dots. Others were
blue, painted by Thomas Schlegel of the University of Bristol at a second box nearby. Some of the
returning scouts started to dance. They climbed up toward the top of the swarm and wheeled around,
waggling their rears. The angle at which they waggled and the time they spent dancing told the fellow
bees where to find the two boxes. Some of the scouts that witnessed the dance flew away to investigate
for themselves.

Then a blue bee did something strange. It began to make a tiny beeping sound, over and over again, and
started head-butting pink bees. Seeley had first heard such beeps in the summer of 2009. He didn’t know
why it was happening, or which bee was beeping. “All I knew was that it existed,” he said. Seeley and his
colleagues have since discovered that the beeps come from the head-butting scouts. Now Seeley moved
his microphone in close to them, calling out each time the bee beeped. It sounded like a mantra:
“Blue...blue...blue...blue...blue.”

When you consider a swarm one bee at a time this way, it starts to look like a heap of chaos. Each insect
wanders around, using its tiny brain to perceive nothing more than its immediate surroundings. Yet,
somehow, thousands of honeybees can pool their knowledge and make a collective decision about where
they will make a new home, even if that home may be miles away.

The decision-making power of honeybees is a prime example of what scientists call swarm intelligence.
Clouds of locusts, schools of fish, flocks of birds and colonies of termites display it as well. And in the
field of swarm intelligence, Seeley is a towering figure. For 40 years he has come up with experiments
that have allowed him to decipher the rules honeybees use for their collective decision-making. “No one
has reached the level of experimentation and ingenuity of Tom Seeley,” says Edward O. Wilson of
Harvard University.

Growing up in Ellis Hollow, in upstate New York, Seeley would bicycle around the farms near his house;
one day he discovered a pair of white boxes. They each contained a hive. Seeley was seduced. He came
back day after day to stare at the hives. He would look into the boxes and see bees coming in with loads
of pollen on their legs. Other bees fanned their wings to keep the hives cool. Other bees acted as guards,
pacing back and forth at the opening.

“If you lie in the grass in front of a hive, you see this immense traffic of bees zooming out of the hive and
circling up and then shooting off in whatever direction they want to go,” said Seeley. “It’s like looking at
a meteor shower.”
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
For his PhD at Harvard, Seeley took up a longstanding entomological question: How do honeybees choose
their homes? He climbed into trees and poured cyanide into hives to kill the honeybees inside. He sawed
down the trees and measured the cavities. Seeley found that bee hive hollows were very much alike. They
were at least ten gallons in volume, sat at least 15 feet off the ground and had a narrow opening.

Seeley built 252 wooden boxes of different shapes and sizes and scattered them in forests and fields to
test how particular bees were about these qualities. Swarms only moved into boxes that had the same
features that Seeley had found in their tree cavities. “It’s really important to get them all right,” Seeley
said.

The architectural tastes of honeybees are not mere whims. If honeybees live in an undersized cavity, they
won’t be able to store enough honey to survive the winter. If the opening is too wide, the bees won’t be
able to fight off invaders.

He took his research to Appledore Island because no native honeybees live here, and it has no big trees
where the insects could make their homes. Seeley and his colleagues would bring their own honeybees
and nest boxes. “This is our laboratory,” Seeley said. “This is where we gain control.”

In one experiment, Seeley set up five boxes of different sizes. Four of the boxes were mediocre, by
honeybee standards, while one was a dream home. In 80 percent of the trials, the swarms chose the dream
home.

Through years of study, Seeley and his colleagues have uncovered a few principles honeybees use to make
these smart decisions. The first is enthusiasm. A scout coming back from an ideal cavity will dance with
passion, making 200 circuits or more and waggling violently all the way. But if she inspects a mediocre
cavity, she will dance fewer circuits.

Enthusiasm translates into attention. An enthusiastic scout will inspire more bees to go check out her site.
And when the second-wave scouts return, they persuade more scouts to investigate the better site.

The second principle is flexibility. Once a scout finds a site, she travels back and forth from site to hive.
Each time she returns, she dances to win over other scouts. But the number of dance repetitions declines,
until she stops dancing altogether. Seeley and his colleagues found that honeybees that visit good sites
keep dancing for more trips than honeybees from mediocre ones.

This decaying dance allows a swarm to avoid getting stuck in a bad decision. Even when a mediocre site
has attracted a lot of scouts, a single scout returning from a better one can cause the hive to change its
collective mind.

“It’s beautiful when you see how well it works,” Seeley said. “Things don’t bog down when individuals
get too stubborn. In fact, they’re all pretty modest. They say, ‘Well, I found something, and I think it’s
interesting. I don’t know if it’s the best, but I’ll report what I found and let the best site win.’”

During the time I visited Seeley, he was in the midst of discovering a new principle. Scouts, he found,
purposefully ram one another head-on while deciding on a new nest location. They head-butt scouts
coming from other locations—pink scouts bumping into blue scouts and vice versa—causing the rammed
bee to stop dancing. As more scouts dance for a popular site, they also, by head-butting, drive down the
number of dancers for other sites.
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
And once the scouts reach a quorum of 15 bees all dancing for the same location, they start to head-butt
one another, silencing their own side so that the swarm can prepare to fly.

One of the things Seeley has been thinking about during his vigils with his swarms is how much they’re
like our own minds. “I think of a swarm as an exposed brain that hangs quietly from a tree branch,” Seeley
said.

A swarm and a brain both make decisions. Our brains have to make quick judgments about a flood of
neural signals from our eyes, for example, figuring out what we’re seeing and deciding how to respond.

Both swarms and brains make their decisions democratically. Despite her royal title, a honeybee queen
does not make decisions for the hive. The hive makes decisions for her. In our brain, no single neuron
takes in all the information from our senses and makes a decision. Millions make a collective choice.

“Bees are to hives as neurons are to brains,” says Jeffrey Schall, a neuroscientist at Vanderbilt University.
Neurons use some of the same tricks honeybees use to come to decisions. A single visual neuron is like a
single scout. It reports about a tiny patch of what we see, just as a scout dances for a single site. Different
neurons may give us conflicting ideas about what we’re actually seeing, but we have to quickly choose
between the alternatives. That red blob seen from the corner of your eye may be a stop sign, or it may be
a car barreling down the street.

To make the right choice, our neurons hold a competition, and different coalitions recruit more neurons
to their interpretation of reality, much as scouts recruit more bees.

Our brains need a way to avoid stalemates. Like the decaying dances of honeybees, a coalition starts to
get weaker if it doesn’t get a continual supply of signals from the eyes. As a result, it doesn’t get locked
early into the wrong choice. Just as honeybees use a quorum, our brain waits until one coalition hits a
threshold and then makes a decision.

Seeley thinks that this convergence between bees and brains can teach people a lot about how to make
decisions in groups. “Living in groups, there’s a wisdom to finding a way for members to make better
decisions collectively than as individuals,” he said.

Recently Seeley was talking at the Naval War College. He explained the radical differences in how swarms
and captain-dominated ships make decisions. “They realize that information is very distributed across the
ship,” Seeley said. “Does it make sense to have power so concentrated? Sometimes you need a fast
decision, but there’s a trade-off between fast versus accurate.”

In his experience, Seeley says, New England town hall meetings are the closest human grouping to
honeybee swarms. “There are some differences, but there are also some fundamental similarities,” he said.
Like scouts, individual citizens are allowed to share different ideas with the entire meeting. Other citizens
can judge for themselves the merit of their ideas, and they can speak up themselves. “When it’s working
properly, good ideas rise up and bad ones sink down,” says Seeley.

Groups work well, he argues, if the power of leaders is minimized. A group of people can propose many
different ideas—the more the better, in fact. But those ideas will only lead to a good decision if listeners
take the time to judge their merits for themselves, just as scouts go to check out potential homes for
themselves.
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
Groups also do well if they’re flexible, ensuring that good ideas don’t lose out simply because they come
late in the discussion. And rather than try to debate an issue until everyone in a group agrees, Seeley
advises using a honeybee-style quorum. Otherwise the debate will drag on.

One of the strengths of honeybees is that they share the same goal: finding a new home. People who come
together in a democracy, however, may have competing interests. Seeley advises that people should be
made to feel that they are part of the decision-making group, so that their debates don’t become about
destroying the enemy, but about finding a solution for everyone. “That sense of belonging can be
nurtured,” Seeley said. The more we fashion our democracies after honeybees, Seeley argues, the better
off we’ll be.

From Chris B. Thayer:

       An interesting gastronomical article: https://beeinformed.org/2019/02/22/fried-drone-brood-a-
healthy-and-savory-snack/

                                        Lagniappe

Photo by SRHerrmann
April Capital Area Buzz - cabainfo.org - Capital Area Beekeepers Association
Check out our           acebook page

           Capital
            Area         Buzz

  Submit your photos for help
   or to give advice to others

 We will add all photos to a slide show at the
begining of each meeting to get club feedback
Member Advice

Sp l it y ou r str o ng c o l o n i es
so that the y d o n't sw ar m .

Don't be f o o l e d by th e             K e e p i t pla i n .
earl y spr i ng w a r m w e at h -
er and bro o d bu i l d u p !            W a t ch fo r s i g n s o f
                                         s wa r m i n g
C h ec k y our h i ve s r e gu l a r -
ly.                                      K e e p y a r d s a n d eq uip-
                                         m e n t clea n
C h ec k / tre at f o r mi te s
asap! Spli t str o ng h i v e s          B e s ur e y o ur b ee s h ave
b e fore the y sw ar m . A l s o ,       s pa ce fo r po llen / h one y as
as weathe r w a r m s u p , g et         t h e n ect a r flo w b e g ins
re ad y f or i ne v i ta bl e h i ve
b e etles.
                                         I N S PEC T A T L EA S T
                                         O N C E A M O N T H.
This is so me th i ng I’v e
wanted to d o f o r y e ar s.
M y advice w o u l d be ,                F e e d 1 :1 s y r up un t i l the y
do n’t wait ! ! ! I’ve h ad              s t o p t a ki n g i t t h e n p ut
m or e f u n w o r k a nd l e ar n -     h o n e y s upe r s o n .
ing abou t B e e s o v e r th e
last year th a n I’ve h a d i n          M a ke s ur e y o u h a ve
year s....                               e n o ug h s uper s o n t he
                                         h i ve .

                                         H a v e e x t r a b o x e s r e ady
                                         ( b r o o d b o x es a n d h one y
                                         s upe r s ) .

9                                                                      c a ba i nf o.or g
Member Advice continued....

       Fo r no vi c e s: li s t en t o a ll t h e a d v i ce
       y o u h e ar /r e a d fr o m e x pe r i e n ce d
       be e k e e p e r s.R ea d a b o ut b e e s a n d
       be e k e e p i ng, wa t ch o n li n e v i d eo s .
       T h e te r m i no lo g y a n d / o r a d vi ce m a y
       be c o nf u si ng a t fi r s t . D o n ' t wo r r y .
       S o o n i t w i l l b e g i n t o m a ke s e n s e .
       S o m e o f th e a d v i ce wi ll b e co n fli ct -
       i ng. T ak e i t a ll i n , t h e n m a ke y o ur
       o w n d e c i si o n s o n h o w y o u wa n t t o
       p r o c e e d . B e e s a r e i n cr e d i b ly r es i l-
       i e nt and u su a lly s ur vi ve b un g li n g
       be e k e e p e r s. K e e p n o t es . W h en e ve r
       y o u d o any th i n g t o y o ur h i v e ( m o ve
       i t to a ne w lo ca t i o n , a d d / r em o ve
       bo x e s, tr e at t h e b e e s , et c. ) , wr i t e i t
       d o w n. Wh e n yo u i n s pect a h i ve, n o t e
       w h a t y o u se e ( po lle n , h o n ey , h i ve
       be e tl e s) o r d o n ' t ( e vi d e n ce o f n e w
       e ggs i n c o m b, g r o wi n g h o n ey s t o r es ,
       h i v e be e tl e s, et c.) . W h e n y o u t e s t a
       ne w tr e a tm e n t o r t e ch n i q ue , r e co r d
       i t. Wh e th e r it s uccee d s o r fa i ls , y o u
       w i l l w ant to kn o w wh a t y o u d i d s o
       y o u c a n r e p e a t i t ( o r n o t !) . Rem e m -
       be r th a t f a i l u r e i s s o m e t i m es m o r e
       i nf o r m a ti o na l t h a n s ucces s . A n d
       mo st i m p o r ta n t ly , e n j o y y o ur b e e s !

10                                                                 c a ba i nf o.or g
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E d ’ s S h en a n d o ah Har dw ar e
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11                                                                           c a ba i nf o.or g
Capital Area
                   Beekeepers Association
                 M E M B E R S H I P A P P L I C AT I O N F O R M

    Beekeeper’s Name

       Spouse’s Name

          No. Colonies

             No. Yards

               Address

                    City                                        State            Zip

                 Phone

        Email Address

Tell us about yourself

 How did you find us?

                         Annual membership dues are still only $10.00.
   Please send your check payable to the Capital Area Beekeepers Association and application form to;

                                          Jacquie Hoover
                                       20076 Weinberger Road
                                       Ponchatoula, LA 70454

*By law all honey bee colonies must be registered with the LA Department of Agriculture & Forestry
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