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         Bees:     more books (100)
  1. The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Kidd, 2005-08-30
  2. Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping Your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends, and Other Realities of Adolescence by Rosalind Wiseman, 2002-03-31
  3. The Backyard Beekeeper: An Absolute Beginner's Guide to Keeping Bees in Your Yard and Garden by Kim Flottum, Weeks Ringle, 2005-05-01
  4. The Art of Bee Movie by Jerry Beck, 2007-10-25
  5. The Geography Bee Complete Preparation Handbook: 1,001 Questions & Answers to Help You Win Again and Again! by Matthew T. Rosenberg, Jennifer E. Rosenberg, et all 2002-05
  6. Fuzzy Bee and Friends (Cloth Books) by Roger Priddy, 2003-09-13
  7. The Bee Tree by Patricia Polacco, 1998-05-04
  8. Queen Bees and Wannabees by Rosalind Wiseman, 2003-06-26
  9. Bee Season: A Novel by Myla Goldberg, 2001-05-15
  10. Bee Movie (Ultimate Sticker Books) by DK Publishing, 2007-09-17
  11. Bee-bim Bop! by Linda Sue Park, 2005-09-12
  12. The Royal Bee by Frances Park, Ginger Park, 2000-02
  13. National Geographic Bee Official Study Guide, 3rd edition (National Geographic Bee Official Study Guide) by Stephen F. Cunha, 2008-01-08
  14. Are You a Bee? (Backyard Books) by Judy Allen, 2004-05-13

1. Bees And Honey
Resource about bees and honey, including diseases of bees, bee products and health, and bee stings.
http://www.kohala.net/bees/
Back to Kohala Net
Visits Since 01/12/99 Honey Catching A Swarm Catching A Wild Hive
Diseases and Afflictions
of Honey Bees ...
Other Valuable Bee Resources
Diseases and Afflictions of Honey Bees Chart of Honey Bee Diseases and Afflictions
Alert !- The following files are large because of the excellent graphic images of the diseases in question. Be patient and you will be rewarded... a better narative for the pictures is in the works. Brood
Cappings

Dead larvae
(initial phase)
Dried Dead Larvae
  • European Foulbrood
Early Infection
Advanced infection

Brood Nest

Dead Larvae
...
Dead Scale
  • Chalkbrood
Infected cell Spores on a larva Mummy Dead larvae litter the bottom board Brood nest Larvae in sac Larva dead in cell On bees The mite itself
Bee Products and Health-
Bee Stings
-How to minimize pain and suffering -Allergy to...

2. Burlington Bees: Home
Official website of the Burlington, Iowa bees minor league baseball team.
http://www.gobees.com
var section="home"; var sid="t420"; var cid=null; var lid=null; var ctxPath="/app"; var pageid="home"; var leagueId=118 var CLUBSITE_SECTIONS=["news","roster","schedule","scoreboard","stats","ballpark","multimedia","fans","about","tickets"] var CMS_MANAGED_CLUBSITE_SECTIONS=["ballpark","fans","about","tickets"] var NON_CMS_MANAGED_CLUBSITE_SECTIONS=["news","roster","schedule","scoreboard","stats","multimedia"] Shop Tickets NavMgr.writeTopNav(["tickets"]); writeSelect(clubsDropdown, "clubs", "getClubPage(this)", "mastheadClubsMenu", "Select Team", cid); var lid=null; writeSelect(leaguesDropdown, "leagues", "getLeaguePage(this)", "mastheadLeaguesMenu", "Select League", lid); var raw=null; Player Stats Expanded Standings
More milbHeadlines(5); More Join Buzz at Community Field Get the Bees' promotions schedule Tour Community Field
MLB.com Sites MLB.com

3. St Bees, Cumbria - Village Web Site
A comprehensive guide to the history and facilities of the small village on the Western coast of Cumbria, which is a popular holiday resort.
http://www.stbees.org.uk/
Accommodation
Churches

Coast to Coast Walk

Events
... Help
St. Bees is a historic village on the West Coast of Cumbria. The village is an ideal base for exploring the Western Lake District and Cumbrian Coast, and is the start of the famous Wainright Coast to Coast Walk. St. Bees Head has the highest cliffs on the west coast between North Wales and Scotland, and is the only Heritage Coast in Cumbria. It is the spectaular location of one of England's most important seabird colonies. Virtual Tours. The index to the left of this page leads to specific areas of information. Alternatively, if you want a look at village life, select the link to our Millennium Book , one of our projects for 2000, for a pictorial overview of St Bees. Also, try the St Bees area on the photo site The most common question received through this site is "How do I get to St Bees?" To find help on this question, look at Transport and Travel or Facilities . General Tourist Information in the way of brochures, etc. is NOT available through this web site but may be obtained by contacting the Whitehaven Tourism Office
A recent addition to the site is the Parish Forum . It contains a Coast to Coast walkers section and "What's On in St Bees". Guests are welcome to both view and post.
If what you want to know about St Bees is not here, let me know or add a comment in the

4. Bees And Beekeeping - EntsWeb Directory
A collection of links to beekeeping information from sites around the world.
http://www.entsweb.co.uk/leisure/beekeeping/
Home Leisure
Beekeeping
Add your Web Site to EntsWeb Go to a Different Directory Accommodation Dance Directories Entertainers Entertainment Services Event Industry Forum Leisure Media Music Party Planning Theatre Tourism Travel Venues Wedding Entertainment EntsWeb Home Page Related Pages Add a Web Site
Apiservices
World's First Virtual Beekeeping Gallery: all information about beekeeping, bees and honey
Arnold Honeybee Services USA
Arnold Honeybee Services is a comprehensive source for all apiary products and services - from honey and pollen to crop pollination and bee removal.
Bee-commerce.com USA
Online advice and supplies for the back yard beekeeper.
Beehoo, the world's beekeeping directory FR
The world beekeeping directory. More than 1000 websites about beekeeping, bees, apitherapy, honey recipes, queen breeding.
Beedata UK
UK Beekeeping News and Information, Beekeeping bulletin Boards, Northern Bee Books.
Beekeeper RU
Lots of information about bees and beekeeping
Beekeeping in New Zealand NZ
Bees as insects and beekeeping as a hobby or commercial activity from a New Zealand perspective. Unique flavours of honey and other products of the hive. Learn how pollination returns many times the value of the honey produced! Issues confronting NZ's beekeepers are described. Current statistics.

5. Honey Bee Facts
Contains information about honey bees. Information includes honey production, behavior, and social classes within the bee colony.
http://www.honey.com/kids/facts.html

Bee Facts
Honey Games Honey Glossary Honey History ... Featured Honey Varietal
Honey Bee Facts
Why do bees make honey We know that bees have been producing honey as they do today for at least 150 million years. Bees produce honey as food stores for the hive during the long months of winter when flowers aren't blooming and therefore little or no nectar is available to them. European honey bees, genus Apis Mellifera , produce such an abundance of honey, far more than the hive can eat, that humans can harvest the excess. For this reason, European honey bees can be found in beekeeper's hives around the world! The Colony Honey bees are social insects, with a marked division of labor between the various types of bees in the colony. A colony of honey bees includes a queen, drones and workers. The Queen
The queen is the only sexually developed female in the hive. She is the largest bee in the colony.

6. How Do Bees Make Honey?
Explains how bees use nectar to make honey
http://www.pa.msu.edu/~sciencet/ask_st/073097.html
How do Bees Make Honey?
(Lansing State Journal, July 30, 1997) Honeybees use nectar to make honey. Nectar is almost 80% water with some complex sugars. In fact, if you have ever pulled a honeysuckle blossom out of its stem, nectar is the clear liquid that drops from the end of the blossom. In North America, bees get nectar from flowers like clovers, dandelions, berry bushes and fruit tree blossoms. They use their long, tubelike tongues like straws to suck the nectar out of the flowers and they store it in their "honey stomachs". Bees actually have two stomachs, their honey stomach which they use like a nectar backpack and their regular stomach. The honey stomach holds almost 70 mg of nectar and when full, it weighs almost as much as the bee does. Honeybees must visit between 100 and 1500 flowers in order to fill their honeystomachs. The honeybees return to the hive and pass the nectar onto other worker bees. These bees suck the nectar from the honeybee's stomach through their mouths. These "house bees" "chew" the nectar for about half an hour. During this time, enzymes are breaking the complex sugars in the nectar into simple sugars so that it is both more digestible for the bees and less likely to be attacked by bacteria while it is stored within the hive. The bees then spread the nectar throughout the honeycombs where water evaporates from it, making it a thicker syrup. The bees make the nectar dry even faster by fanning it with their wings. Once the honey is gooey enough, the bees seal off the cell of the honeycomb with a plug of wax. The honey is stored until it is eaten. In one year, a colony of bees eats between 120 and 200 pounds of honey.

7. Bees
Worker bees tend to mob intruders. The urbanized Africanized honey bee presents a new As well, the freed honey attracts robber bees and wasps.
http://www.greensmiths.com/bees.htm
Bees and Wasps
The insects most beneficial to humans are found in the large insect order Hymenoptera. Not only are the bees and many of their relatives pollinators of flowering plants, including fruits and vegetables, but thousands of species of small wasps are parasites of other arthropods including pest insects. Without these parasites that limit the growth of insect populations, pests would overtake most crops.
The urban pests of the order Hymenoptera are the stinging insects. Although the first image to come to mind implies danger to humans, these yellowjackets, hornets, and wasps sometimes serve our interest: They feed their young largely on flies and caterpillars.
Many of these stinging insects are social. They live in colonies with a caste system or a division of labor and overlapping generations all offspring of one individual reproductive. Some of these colonies persist for many years (ants, honey bees) and others, like stinging wasps, start anew each year. THE AFRICANIZED BEE
The Africanized bee is the same species as the European honey bee kept by beekeepers all over the United States. Introduced into Brazil from southern Africa, it is adapted to longer warm seasons than are northern honey bees.

8. Solidaity Bees
Follows solitary bee development and provides extensive list of variations of bees.
http://www.xs4all.nl/~jtemp/sol_bee_life.html
back to how to manege them LINKS
first the course of their life
all happends!! it is nature!! (all is possible>>>what is possible happends>>>all happends!!) egg>.........>young larva>half larva>>old larva>........>young popa>>half popa>>old popa>...........>young adult
  • both sexes sleep (hibernate) in winter as adult larva. In springtime they pupate (develop into adults, fly out and mate). Out of the eggs appear the new generations and develop to the stage of adult larva and then go into a wintersleep (hibernation).

  • PROSOPIS (larva in wintersleep)
  • both sexes sleep (hibernate) in winter as nympha (pupa). In springtime they develop into adults. The new generation developes to the pupa stage and then go into wintersleep.

  • MEGACHILI, ERIADES (pupa in wintersleep)
  • both sexes sleep in winter as adults in the cocoon. Leaving the cocoon in springtime, the new generation develops to the adult popa stage while still in the cocoon and go into wintersleep.

  • OSMIA : probably most of the springbees.(not fly-out (non meted) adults in wintersleep)
  • both sexes sleep in the wintertime as fully developed adults. They mate in late spring. In the new generation: the sexes don't mate, and both go separately into wintersleep.
  • 9. Honey.com - The Honey Expert
    Honey.com is your source for honey information and recipes. Honey.com the honey expert
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    10. Ice Hockey With The Bracknell Bees Ice Hockey Team
    Official site includes details of the squad, fixture list, latest news, scoreboard, match photos, statistics, online shop, arena information and ticket pricing.
    http://www.beesprohockey.com/
    @import "/css/screen.cal.css"; /*********************************************** * Popup Information Box III-By Brian Gosselin at http://scriptasylum.com/bgaudiodr/ * Script featured on Dynamic Drive (http://www.dynamicdrive.com) * This notice must stay intact for use * Visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com/ for full source code ***********************************************/ The Bees Ice Hockey Team :: Mon 19 Sep 2005 BEES ONLINE The Team The Players The Coach Latest News
    The Games Game Photos
    Home Arena Arena Information View The Seats Tickets Virtual Tour
    Archive 2002-03 Season 2003-04 Season
    Welcome to www.beesprohockey.com - the official home of the Bees Ice Hockey Team. BNL Champions! 9th February 2005
    The Bees this evening became the Champions of the British National League after their roa...
    PRESS RELEASE
    PRESS RELEASE - END OF AN ERA It's Party Time

    29th MArch 2005
    Friday will be a day of celebration for a great seas..
    Skates - 852 Tacks Juniors More Information For the very latest bees merchandise Shop Online. Official Forum Read The Forum Coach's Corner Comments Home The Coach Team Roster ... Contact Us

    11. Honey Bee Facts
    Contains information about honey bees. Information includes honey production, behavior, and social classes within the bee colony.
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    12. Bees - Superfamily APOIDEA
    Pictures and information of bees in Brisbane, Australia.
    http://www.geocities.com/brisbane_wasps/Bees.htm
    Home Hymenoptera Sawflies Bramble Sawfly ... Guest book
    Bees - Superfamily APOIDEA
    This page contains pictures and information about Bees that we found in the Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia.
    The long-tongued Blue-banded Bee
    Bees belong to the insect Order Hymenoptera , which includes parasitic wasps stinging wasps ants and sawflies Most bees live as individual, although the famous Honey Bees are social insects. The solitary bees live in burrow under ground or in tree stems. In their nests, there are chambers for their larvae, beside there are the storage for the nectar and pollen. Some species bees live together and using the same entry, although each have their own nest and look after their own young. Some bee species are social insects, only the queen lay eggs. There are the sterile workers in a large colony. Both wasps and bees visit flowers and sometimes may be hard to distinguishing them. Most wasps larvae are either carnivorous or parasitic while bees are vegetarian. Bees larvae feed on pollen. Bees carry pollen by the hairs on their legs and body. In general bees with hairy body and legs but wasps with no or very little hairs on their body and legs. Unlike other members in Hymenoptera, bees' mouthparts are modified to a hairy tongue, which is used for sucking up nectar from flowers. When rest bees fold their tongue in mouth in Z-shape. Besides the tongue, bees mouthpart have two strong mandibles, functioning as hands more than teethes. Besides used for eating pollen, it is for building hive, dragging, fighting and feeding the larvae.

    13. Honeybee Biology
    The Relationship Between Flowers and bees
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    14. Apiservices - The Beekeeping Portal - Le Portail Apiculture - Apicultura - Imker
    Information, products and services for beekeeping, bees and honey. 65 hosted companies and associations. Quadrilingual site English, French, Spanish and German.
    http://www.beekeeping.com
    Virtual Beekeeping Gallery bees, honey, equipment, journals, market, associations, companies, classified ads, forums, tools, events, institutes, laboratories, museums, personalized advice, databases, links, etc. Galerie Virtuelle Apicole apiculture, abeilles, miel, équipement, revues, marchés, associations, sociétés, petites annonces, outils, manifestations, instituts, laboratoires, musées, conseils personnalisés, bases de données, liens, etc. ... Réalisation / Realización / Realisierung
    Gilles RATIA
    APISERVICES

    15. Bees
    Digger bees / Fivebanded Tiphiid Giant Hornet / Honey bees Giant Hornet / Honey bees Hungry Wasps (not the real name, just a great picture)
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    16. B-EYE: The World Through The Eyes Of A Bee
    Part of my work involves training bees to discriminate between two different I wrote BEYE as a tool to give me some idea what my bees perceive of the
    http://cvs.anu.edu.au/andy/beye/beyehome.html
    See the world through the eyes of a honey bee
    Welcome to the B-EYE pages! Have you ever wondered how other creatures see the world? Here you can find out. Well, at least you can find out how HONEY BEES see the world. Well, let's say you can find out what we THINK the world looks like to a bee. Well, not the WHOLE world, really, but a subset of the world, namely a number of greyscale pictures. But, still, I'm sure you will find it an interesting experience... I am a neuroscientist working on bee vision. Part of my work involves training bees to discriminate between two different visual patterns. I wrote B-EYE as a tool to give me some idea what my bees perceive of the patterns I present them with. The Description page will tell you what exactly the program does. There are three ways to view the world through a bee's eye: Gallery (pre-processed images, ready to download) Hover (hover at close range in front of a pattern) Submit (choose a picture, set the parameters and run B-EYE) Have fun bee~ing around! And let me know of any problems, bugs, questions, comments,... Andrew Giger, andrew@cvs.anu.edu.au

    17. Insecta Inspecta World - Killer Bees
    Provides information about killer bees. Information includes colony life, differences between killer bees and honey bees, and the honey production
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

    18. Welcome To Burt's Bees
    Earth Friendly All Natural Personal Care Products.
    http://www1.burtsbees.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/StoreCatalogDisplay?langId=-

    19. Agriculture, Weights & Measures
    Collection of tips by San Diego County.
    http://www.co.san-diego.ca.us/cnty/cntydepts/landuse/agri/ahb_avoid.html
    Africanized Honey Bees
    How to Avoid Being Stung
    Introduction
    Africanized honey bees are a more temperamental relative of the common garden honey bee, which is known as the European honey bee. They were first introduced into Brazil in 1956, and have been steadily moving northward since then. They are currently found in the United States in parts of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. Africanized honey bees are known to defend their colonies more intensively and with less provocation than other bees, and so it is important to know how to avoid being stung.
    Stay away from honey bee colonies.
    Africanized honey bees sting to defend themselves or their nest. If you can avoid disturbing them in any way, they usually will not sting. To avoid approaching a nest by accident, listen for the steady buzz produced by a colony and look for flying insects. Look for bees to nest in cavities such as holes in the ground, crevices in rocks, hollow trees, discarded tires, saguaro cactus cavities, or water meter boxes. Homeowners commonly encounter colonies when doing yard work. Do not climb a tree, kick over a log or roll over a rock without checking first for bees. If you do see a colony, do not stand in front of the entrance or in the flight path. Treat honey bee colonies as you would any other venomous creature, such as a snake or a scorpion. Be alert and stay away!

    20. Bees And Honey
    Resource about bees and honey, including diseases of bees, bee products and health, and bee stings.
    http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

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