Pot-Honey : A legacy of stingless bees /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Vit, Patricia. (Editor ), Pedro, Silvia R. M. (Editor ), Roubik, David. (Editor )
Formato: eBook
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2013.
Edición:1st ed. 2013.
Materias:
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • I. Origin, biodiversity and behavior of the stingless bees (Meliponini)
  • 1. The Meliponini
  • 2. Historical biogeography of the Meliponini (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Apinae) of the Neotropical region
  • 3. Australian stingless bees
  • 4. Stingless bees from Venezuela
  • 5. Stingless bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Meliponini) of French Guiana
  • 6. Stingless bees of Guatemala
  • 7. Stingless bees of Costa Rica
  • 8. Stingless bees in Argentina
  • 9. Mexican stingless bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae): Diversity, biogeography, and indigenous knowledge
  • 10. The role of useful microorganisms to stingless bees and to stingless bee keeping
  • 11. Microorganisms associated with stingless bees
  • 12. Stingless bee food location communication: from the flowers to the honey pots
  • 13. On competition and the diversity of food-collection strategies in stingless bees
  • II. Stingless bees in culture, traditions and environment
  • 14. Stingless bees: An historical perspective. 15. Medicinal uses of Melipona beecheii pot-honey, by the ancient Maya
  • 16. Hans Staden’s first report from 1557 on collection of stingless bee honey by an indigenous tribe in Brazil
  • 17. The Melipona bee in the scientific world: Western cultural views
  • 18. Taxonomy as a tool for conservation of African stingless bees and their honey
  • 19. Effects of human disturbance and habitat fragmentation on stingless bees
  • III. What plants are used by the stingless bees?
  • 20. Palynology serving the stingless bees
  • 21. How to be a bee botanist using pollen spectra
  • 22. Plants used by stingless bees for nesting and as floral resources
  • 23. Botanical origin of pot-honey Tetragonisca angustula Latreille in Colombia
  • IV. Sensory attributes and composition of pot-honey
  • 24. Sensory evaluation of pot-honey
  • 25. Melipona favosa pot-honey fromVenezuela
  • 26. Tetragonisca angustula pot-honey compared to Apis mellifera honey from Brazil
  • 27. Honey of Colombian native bees
  • 28. The pot-honey of Guatemalan stingless bees
  • 29. Pot-honey of six species of Meliponini from Amboró National Park in Bolivia
  • 30. Electronic nose and physicochemical analysis to differentiate Colombian pot-honey
  • 31. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance as a method for molecular profiling and prediction of geographical and entomological origin of pot-honey
  • 32. Non-aromatic organic acids of honeys
  • V. Biological properties
  • 33. Flavonoids in stingless-bee and honey-bee honeys
  • 34. Antioxidant activity of pot-honey
  • 35. Use of honey in cancer prevention and therapy
  • 36. Bioactivity of honey and propolis from Tetragonula laeviceps in Thailand
  • 37. Costa Rican pot- honey: Its medicinal use and antibacterial effect
  • 38. Immunological properties of bee products
  • 39. Chemical properties of propolis collected by stingless bees
  • VI. Marketing and standards of pot-honey
  • 40. Production and marketing of pot-honey
  • Appendix
  • 1. Taxonomic index of bee species
  • 2. List of bee taxa
  • 3. Common names of stingless bees
  • 4. Taxonomic index of plant families
  • 5. List of plant taxa used by bees
  • 6. Common names of plants used for nesting by stingless bees
  • 7. Common names of medicinal plants used with honey by Mayas
  • 8. Microorganisms associated to stingless bees or used to test antimicrobial activity
  • 9. Summary of meliponine and Apis mellifera honey composition
  • 10. Information of collected stingless bees
  • Subject list
  • Authors list.