Beekeepers in the Yucatán peninsula have harvested honey from the nests of
M. beecheii until
Africanized bees arrived. As a result,
M. beecheii is facing loss of habitat and the ancient tradition of stingless beekeeping is on the verge of dying out.
Agriculture Because
M. beecheii is a stingless bee and eats nectar, its
ecological niche does not involve hunting pest insects. However,
M. beecheii plays an extremely important role in honey production, as they have been kept for centuries almost exclusively in log nests primarily by people who live in the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico.
M. beecheii is an important source of honey both in the region and around the world. Due to the concern that stingless bee keeping is going extinct, the possibility of negative effects resulting from the impact of competition from feral African
Apis mellifera, over-harvesting, failure to transfer colonies to hives or divide them, deforestation, hurricane damage and lack of instruction and incentive for new stingless bee keepers has been postulated and explored.
Stings Melipona beecheii is a stingless bee and, as a result, cannot sting humans or other organisms. This characteristic makes them ideal for
beekeeping. That being said, when agitated,
M. beecheii does have the capacity to bite other organisms. However, there is no medical hazard or allergy factor involved.
History and art In accordance with Mayan history,
M. beecheii are the embodiment of a link to the spirit world, an endowment of the god
Ah Muzen Cab.
M. beecheii serves as the subject of various Mayan religious ceremonies.
M. beecheii has been greatly revered by Mayan culture throughout history, leading to its keeping by the Mayan people as a means of attaining a higher-being, one which is closer to God. According to the Maya tradition, a priest would harvest
M. beecheii honey during a religious ceremony that would take place twice a year. As a means of increasing the number of nests and honey production, beekeepers would regularly divide existing nests. This would also help to alleviate the predicament of excess queens that occurs with
M. beecheii. ==References==