Think you work hard? Inside a beehive, only seniors get to rest, and about 1000 bees can die each day just from exhaustion. It's Bee Aware Month - a campaign dedicated to the industrious insects and the irreplaceable role they play in our orchards, crops and natural ecosystems. Auckland bee expert Steve Leslie, who will be giving free talks at Kings Plant Barn garden centres throughout September, shares his 10 favourite facts about them.
1. Bees are responsible for pollination of approximately one third of the food we eat - and 90 per cent of fruit trees are pollinated by bees. There's nothing wrong with rice, corn and other plants not pollinated by bees, but we would lose a lot of our diverse and rich variety of food without bees.
2. A 500gm jar of honey is the result of visits to approximately two million flowers and is the life's work of more than 1000 bees. Each worker, or female, bee produces around one 12th of a teaspoon of honey in her life. Such hard work for a lovely and tasty product.
3. Bees invented air-conditioning long before humans. The brood or nest area of the hive needs to stay a steady 33-34C for the young bees to develop properly. This means in winter, the nurse bees warm the area by beating their wing muscles - they can disconnect their wings from the muscles - and on hot summer days they line up across half the hive entrance, fanning their wings and drawing hot air out of the hive. Other bees inside help to push the hot air down to the entrance. Cooler air is drawn in through the other side of the entrance, thereby creating airflow within the hive, and air-conditioning.
4. The hive is a factory, with "inwards goods" where foragers bring back nectar and pollen; "assembly and manufacturing", where they convert nectar to honey; and "outwards goods", home to new bees who will grow up to be foragers. The different areas of the factory communicate with each other so they respond to changes in season, sudden flowering of a good source of food, and so on by shifting labour to the team which needs it.