BEEs loves HEMP......

A recently released study has found bees really like hemp – and it seems the taller the variety, the better.

Researchers from Cornell University’s Department of Entomology made repeated sweep net collections of bees visiting hemp flowers on eleven farms in the Finger Lakes region of New York state and found 16 different bee species. The most commonly captured were A. mellifera (European honey bee – 60% – image A above ) and B. impatiens (common eastern bumblebee – 30% – image B above).

An interesting finding was plant height strongly correlated with bee species diversity and also abundance, with taller varieties attracting a broader diversity. Tall hemp plants attracted nearly 17 times the number of visits compared to short plants. The researchers suggest this is not only due to taller plants producing a greater overall amount of pollen, but also that they are more apparent.

The study report states hemp has the potential to provide a critical nutritional resource for bees in periods of floral scarcity and may assist in sustaining pollination services for other crops. It was noted abundance increased throughout the sampling period, perhaps indicating hemp’s importance in late summer when the flowers of other late-season crops deteriorate.

The researchers also made an important point with regard to pest management. While hemp is a hardy crop, it still has its share of predators and eradication of hemp pests can also pose a threat to bees as many pesticides aren’t bee-friendly.

“As cultivation of hemp increases, growers, land managers, and policy makers should consider its value in supporting bee communities and take its attractiveness to bees into account when developing pest management strategies,” state the authors.

Another interesting bit of information from the study is the effect of cannabinoids on bees.

“The presence of cannabinoids, particularly tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), in hemp pollen (York et al. 1975) is not likely to have an impact on bee development due to the loss of cannabinoid receptors in insects,” state the authors.

The study report, titled “The Bee Community of Cannabis sativa and Corresponding Effects of Landscape Composition” is an interesting read and was published in the journal Environmental Entomology.

Source:

https://hempgazette-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/hempgazette.com/news/bees-hemp-study-hg1066/amp/

11 Likes

I’m leaving males for this very reason. My hemp gets pollinated anyway so there is no point in removing food for bees. And they love some pollen in August and September.

I’ve seen many bees sleeping, covered in pollen and most likely stuffed as well, taking a nap before way home.

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Bees also love female weed too, ive seen hoards of them collecting resin from the nugs, very cool to watch. I usually dont have males around, so i dont know if they are more or less attracted to the males over the females

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Do you think there could be any measurable amount of cbd in the honey?

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Im guessing 0.5% or less but i think u would get detectable amounts. A 5g honey stick could have 25mg in it

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Naturally confused CBD in honey would awesome!!!

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Where can I buy CBD honey disty manufactured from industrial bee hives

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@Future this is why I added that line on the Pesticide List to include toxicity to Bees :honeybee:
:call_me_hand:
Let’s get that updated and open sourced and hopefully enough awareness and political push or whatever it needs to Be as honey bee and pollinators friendly as possible in our communities

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@TouchPoint thanks for this post!!

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Hypothetical situation:
What if I get some bee hives and strategically place them next to local hemp fields

Am I stealing product? Molecular bee warfare?

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If you visit the industrial hemp farm and take a gigantic deep breath, you are consuming some serious hemp air. You’re not stealing…just appreciating the beauty of hemp

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I was considering a pay and pick hemp farm. Just like the apple orchards…you get a bucket and you get to harvest as much hemp as you want…note this pertains to hemp flowers only.

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Bees are after nectar for food, which hemp does not make. Bees spread pollen around mostly by accident.

I have kicked around the idea myself. You would have to spray the hemp with sugar water, which bees love even more than nectar. Their range can be up to 2 miles, so one would need to either contain them, or be in the middle of a really big field, or else there would be other pollen mixed in. The problem is that diversity of flora is the biggest impacting factor in the health of a hive. When I pitch my idea to any responsible bee keeper, they wil cut me off and say “I would never do that to my bees.” It is hard enough to keep hives healthy right now, with new pests and diseases.

CBD can be mixed into regular honey (unless you ask the FDA) but both isolate and cbd oil tend to separate out.

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Haven’t thought about the yet, but that would be awesome! I wanna try that honey!

I use to have a honey bee hive. You could easily put these around hemp fields to make cbd novelty honey that would sell great.

They actually harvest off the trichs?

I know some strains like GDP must have some kinda sugar bc it’s like dumpign sugar in your mouth smoking it

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Looks like resin to me,
They fly and walk on the buds then go to the fan leaves to clean themselves up. They scrap it onto their leg i assume. Something to note, They would put it on one leg or the other, not both.

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Holy fuck Batman that’s some the coolest shit I’ve ever seen!

I wanna try that honey!

Yeah they loved the raspberry boogie that year, i would have loved to find their hive haha

Im curious if the cbd or thc would eventually crash out, like it does when u mix thc and cbd into honey, after a month or two it seperates. I bet the bee derived canna honey would be stable for years

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@Thetetraguy @Autumn_Ridge_Hemp

They’re using it for propolis it appears. I would imagine it would be an ideal propolis source.

Edit: Also Bees eat pollen and feed it to their hive as far as I know

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So topical use only i suppose, still would be awesome to have some naturally extracted cannabinoids

Maybe distill it