Archive | October 2019

Probiotics Strengthen Bees Immune Systems

We believe that feeding our bees certain supplements helps them be as healthy as they can be, and supports their natural immune strength to repel things like foulbrood. Why should gut health not apply to honeybees?

Mann Lake sells a bee pattie that provides bees with probiotics to keep them strong and we use it at Golden Glow Gardens. Our bees love the patties and devour them within weeks.

Nature Magazine published an article recently confirming our theory. The link to the full article is https://www.nature.com/articles/s41396-019-0541-6. In part, what Nature said is that “American foulbrood (AFB) is a highly virulent disease afflicting honey bees (Apis mellifera). The causative organism, Paenibacillus larvae, attacks honey bee brood and renders entire hives dysfunctional during active disease states, but more commonly resides in hives asymptomatically as inactive spores that elude even vigilant beekeepers. The mechanism of this pathogenic transition is not fully understood, and no cure exists for AFB. …. These findings suggest the usage of a lactobacilli-containing hive supplement, which is practical and affordable for beekeepers, may be effective for reducing enzootic pathogen-related hive losses.” Read on if you’re interested in this topic!

Six Weeks After Swarm Rescue

Six weeks after finding a swarm of honeybees up in the branches of an orange tree, capturing the swarm and making them at home in one of our empty hives, this newly established swarm is thriving. Aren’t they happy looking bees! It’s great to see them returning to the hive, legs plump with pollen.

Since we rescued this live late in the season (end of August), we were concerned they wouldn’t have enough nectar or pollen to build up a well-stocked hive before winter set in. So we regularly feed the bees a 1/1 sugar syrup, sometimes adding Honey B Healthy for extra fortification. The bees have built up lots of fresh comb and filled it with honey, which we’ll let them keep to live on over the winter. They do still seem to be pulling in a lot of flower supplies, but whether it’s that or the syrup supplementation, this hive is thriving. Last time we inspected the hive, we found the frames building out nicely with comb and filled with uncapped honey and brood too.


Here is the entrance to the hive, showing the bees going in and out at a great pace, laden with pollen on their legs when they return. We gave them some beeswax scraped from the queen divider on the absconded hive to use to renew and build out more of their own comb.

Groundbreaking Mushroom Research Gives Hope to Bees

Bees are dying. In massive numbers. Termed colony collapse disorder, the die-off counts among its causes a parasite chillingly named Varroa destructor. A flat, button-shaped, eight-legged critter no more than 2 millimeters long, varroa mites invade the hives, latch onto their prey – the innocent honeybees, and literally suck out the bees insides like body-snatchers, transmitting devastating viruses into the hive in the process.

The worst of these diseases is deformed wing virus, believed to be one of the largest contributors to colony collapse worldwide. Named for the shrunken and misshapen wings that develop in affected bees, DWV robs bees of their ability to fly, undermines their immune systems, and shortens their lifespan to just a few days. The sicker a bee is, and the more useless its wings, the fewer plants it pollinates. Even worse, the flowers an infected bee does manage to visit become contaminated by the virus, which then results in the infection being passed on to the next bees that visit that plant. As if that wasn’t terrifying enough, beekeepers currently know no effective way to combat the virus.

But in a study in Nature Magazine, researchers including Paul Stamets of Fungi Perfecti https://fungi.com/pages/bees present evidence of a surprising solution to DWV: mushrooms, specifically easy to obtain and inexpensive amadou and reishi varieties of mushrooms. The discovery has implications not just for honeybee populations, but also the food systems, economies, and ecosystems that rely on bees being healthy, such as the huge almond growing industry of central California.

The mushrooms in question belong to the genera Fomes and Ganoderma, more commonly known as amadou and reishi. The former grow on trees in the shape of a horse’s hoof. The latter have long been prized in traditional medicine circles and are a frequent sight at Asian markets and health food stores. Both varieties of mushrooms belong to an order of fungi known as polypores, extracts of which have been shown in numerous studies to possess potent antiviral properties against dangerous infections like HIV, pox and swine flu viruses.

“I wanted to see if those extracts had a similar antiviral effect in bees,” says Paul Stamets, the study’s lead author. A prominent mycologist, the author of Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms, and a passionate proselytizer of all things fungal (his TED talk, “6 Ways Mushrooms Can Save the World,” has been viewed millions of times), Stamets has long suspected that bees derive some benefit from mushrooms.

He recalls a scene from his backyard in July of 1984—the first time he noticed bees from his personal hive flying back and forth to a pile of fungus-coated wood chips. The bees, he says, were sipping droplets of liquid that had oozed from the mushroom’s mycelium, the fuzzy white network of cobwebby filaments through which fungi absorb nutrients.

At the time he figured the droplets contained sugar (fungi break down wood into glucose). “But then, a few years ago, I had an epiphany—a waking dream, actually, ” Stamets says. What if the bees were getting more than a shot of sugar? He began to wonder if they were in fact self-medicating.

Join Paul Stamets’ “Save the Bees” mailing list by emailing bee@fungi.com.