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Dr. Dinh Quyet Tam Vietnam Beekeepers Association.

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Presentation on theme: "Dr. Dinh Quyet Tam Vietnam Beekeepers Association."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dr. Dinh Quyet Tam Vietnam Beekeepers Association

2 Climate Change Climate change is a change in the usual weather: – Rainfall – Temperature – Seasonality – Extreme weather events (floods, droughts, typhoons…) Climate change occurs in different scale from region to global Climate change impact to all nature, organisms and human worldwide

3 Beneficiaries of honeybees and Beekeeping Agricultural crops and wild plants up on honeybees’ pollination – Around 35% of agricultural crops (Klein et al. 2007) – About 84% of cultivated plant species (William 1996) – Play important role for biodiversity by fertilization for floral plant Honeybee is the most important pollinator – Unique insect to be kept by human for thousands years – Distribution throughout the world, high range of adaption to climatic and regional variation – High economic value from pollination and bee products Value of honeybees – US$ 117 billion per year worldwide (Costanza et al., 1997) estimated as pollinator ($14.6 billion/year in the USA (Cornell University 1999), EUR 14.2 billion/year in EU (Gallai et al., 2009), £1 billion/year in UK (BBC News 1999) – Supplying valuable bee products: honey, wax, royal jellly, propolis – Job-creation and income-generation and reduction povery in developing countries

4 Climate Change Impact to Honeybees Direct: – Biology and physiology of honeybees: Behavior, foraging, reproduction, lifecycle, distribution – Honeybees has biologic and genetic characters to adapt to climate change over hundreds million year for survival. Indirect: – Habitats: Plants as nectar and pollen sources, availability of forage, water, agricultural landscape – Parasites and Pathogens: Mites (Varroa destructor, Tropilaelaps spp., Acarine), Small Hive Beettle, Wax Moth, Bacteria (American foulbrood, European foulbrood), Microsporideae (Nosema ceranae, Nosema apis), Fungal (Chalk brood, Stone brood), Virus: (Sacbrood, ABPV, CBPV, IAPV, KBV, DWV…) – Predators: Birds, Wasps, Dragon-Flies, Spiders, Mantises, Toads, Geckoes, Weasels, Bears… – Invasion and competition between new ecotypes, races, alien species like Africanized honeybees – Pesticides and Fungicides, Herbicides – Social-Economic Factors: Agricultural system, Land use, Policy, Social perception

5 An apiary in rubber treesNectar on rubber leave A worker bee drinking Small Hive Beetle in colony Spores of Nosema ceranae Tropilaelaps clareae

6 How to Protect Beekeeping 1.Habitats: Make an environment with availability of forage and safe for honeybees – Limit deforestation – Develop reforestation – Ensure agricultural systems and vegetation are suitable – Using pesticides/fungicides/herbicides in right compounds and direction to minimize harmful for honeybees

7 2.Biodiversity: For indigenous species  Preserve indigenous honeybees  Select and breed good subspecies  Apply appropriated methods for honey hunting For exotic species: Apis mellifera Select and preserve good ecotypes to breed Import selected drone’s semen to increase biodiversity by Artificial Insemination 3.Research: Biological and genetic honeybees Parasites, pathogens, predators and control methods Nectar and pollen sources Forage and nutrition New techniques and equipment for beekeeping Beekeeping economy How to Protect Beekeeping

8 4.Raising awareness of the community about beekeeping: – Propagate role of honeybees and beekeeping – Diversify traditional beekeeping models – Educate beekeeping in selected schools, agricultural colleges and universities – Multimedia: TVs, Books, Posters, Leaflets, Newspapers… – Organize seminars, workshop, events about honeybees and beekeeping How to Protect Beekeeping

9 5.Governmental: – Promulgate policies to protect the honeybees and floral sources; regulations for using pesticides, beekeeping preservation, good beekeeping practice, quality standards for bee products and equipment – Enhance capacity of lab to control quality – Support for training courses, beekeeping extension, marketing, free or low tax for beekeeping – Grant for bee research and development – Assist private beekeeper to set up organizations (cooperative, association..) – Promote trade and marketing: Advistisement, Trade Far, study tours – Facilitate credit for beekeepers – Encourage deveping traditional beekeeping models (log hives, top-bar hives) with Apis ceranan How to Protect Beekeeping

10 5.Famers, Beekeepers and Exporters – Raise perception of protection of honeybees and evironment – Apply and abide by rules and requirement on good beekeeping practice and pesticide guided by manufacturers – Try to produce organic honey and value added products – Respect to commitments and contracts with sellers and buyers about quality, quantity – Establish effective cooperation between researchers, farmers, beekeepers, exporters in producing, breeding and maketing 6.International cooperation in: – Scientific studies on the honeybees and beekeeping – Education and Development beekeeping – Marketing – Join International orgainization: Apimondia, AAA How to Protect Beekeeping

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