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Honey Bee Eusociality and Castes | honeybee colonies | Haplodiploidy | Apiculture of honey bees 7.05 A fascinating aspect of honeybee colonies is that they are eusocial. Eusociality is characterized by three distinct traits. The first is that eusocial species have cooperative brood care in which individuals care for offspring that are not their own. The second component of the eusocial society is an overlap of generations as the offspring assist the reproductives with colony tasks. The final trait of the eusocial society, is that it has a caste system, with most of the colony represented by individuals that do not reproduce and only one or a few reproductive individuals. Eusociality has evolved independently in several orders of insects. In addition, to the Hymenoptera including all termites, some species of thrips and aphids, and even with beetle species. Within the Hymenoptera, eusociality has evolved multiple times. All ants are eusocial along with some bees and wasps. The altruistic behavior that drives the evolution of eusocial societies, such as cooperative brood care, is more likely to arise if individuals share similar genes and are closely related. In Hymenoptera such close kinship maybe the result of the genetic phenomenon known as haplodiploidy. Apiculture of honey bees | apiculture lecture | apiculture equipment | honey bees making honey 07 04 this module contains apiculture full lecture, apiculture equipment's, honey bee diseases and insects attack. Both wild and domesticated bee species facilitate pollination that helps agricultural production and supports ecological diversity. Many species of bees have been domesticated throughout human history. The bees in the genus Apis, collectively called the honeybees, were the first to be domesticated about 7,000 years ago. These were domesticated because they produce a variety of products that we use or consume, including honey and wax. Both of which are produced in large enough quantities to be harvested and farmed by humans. There are also easily managed by keeping them in hives, which has promoted a long history of apiculture in human society. Apiculture is the maintenance of honeybee colonies by humans and hives built by people. Play video starting at :1:6 and follow transcript1:06 It is an important part of our agriculture, economy, and environmental health, and is now an important global practice. We know from cave paintings of bees and honey collection that the exploitation of honeybees has been happening for at least 9,000 years. Honey is a sweet carbohydrate-rich food that is still consumed by people all around the globe. There are more than 80 million managed beehives around the world that together produce about 1.6 million tons of honey every year. In Canada, over 700,000 managed honeybee colonies produced more than 43 million kilograms of honey, valued at $230 million in 2015, most of which is produced in the Prairie provinces. #honeybeediseases #insect collection #insect collection and preservation # honey bee #apiculture equipment #entomology #insects #lectures #modules #entomologicalhub #notes #musculature #dispersal #insect #mosquito #wings #modifications #types #wingscience #flightmechanism #migration #glaive #monster #monarch #butterfly #nutrient #cycling #insectsnutrientcycling #detritivore #xylophages #coprophages #necrophages #coevoloutation #plantfeedinginsects, #entomology #entomologylectures #entomologycourse #insectdigestivesystem #insectexcretorysystem #digestion #excretion #course #lecture #insect #entomologicalhub