Abstract

An assessment of beekeeping potential, richness, and distribution of plant species foraged by stinging honey bee Apis mellifera L. in West Kilimanjaro Tanzania Forest Service Agency (TFS) Plantation area was conducted in 2020. A total of 40, 20 m x 20 m plots were set on the 5 natural vegetation remnants within the plantation forest ranges of Sanya juu, Lemosho, Hill wood, Wasendo, and Londrosi at an interval of 100 m. Within the 20 m x 20 m, 1 m x 1 m nested plots were established to assess herbs, sedge, grasses, and seedlings, while 2 m x 5 m were established to determine shrubs. Agriculture crops grown by the bordering villagers were identified and evaluated for the bee forage potential. Plant species richness (S) was determined from the total number of plant species identified from every site using the Shannon Weiner Diversity Index (H’). Plant species distribution was determined grounded on the frequency (F) and evenness (E) were determined. The sites were revealed to have high plant species diversity foraged by stinging honey bees. A total of 204 plant species belonging to 76 families and 178 genera were identified. The calculates H’ of 2.37 for non-wood plants and 3.05 for wood plants implied high plant diversity. The most distributed plant species had a relative frequency (RF) of 6.250 ± 3.0303, while the rest had an RF < 3.0303. The disappearance of one species does not cause any significant effect on bees, as they can go for another species in the area. 92% of non-woody plants and 94% of the identified woody plants were known to be foraged by stinging honey bees. The evenness (E) of 0.7484 for non-wood plants and 0.795 implied that the plants in all categorize were not evenly distributed. West Kilimanjaro Forest Plantation (WKFP) natural forest patches are potential for honey beekeeping. Stinging honey bee fodder plants should be planted, regular visits to the project sites should be exercised to protect honey theft, spot clearing to give a room for naturally germinated seedlings covered by climbers. Further study should be done on the biological species diversity, training to beekeeping staff, and plan for regular inspection of the honey bee colony strength will help to reveal any challenges facing the venture including diseases and hives strengths and weakness.

Highlights

  • Worldwide beekeeping products have been known for their role such as to provide high-value products as a source of income and nutrition value (FAO, 2015)

  • This study aimed to assess the beeping potential, richness and distribution of plant species foraged by the stinging honey bee in West Kilimanjaro Plantation

  • Plant species richness which is the total number of The study was conducted in five targeted areas species of a given locality forms the plant (Table 1 & Figure 1) for beekeeping intervention community properties together with evenness within the West Kilimanjaro Plantation

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Summary

Introduction

Worldwide beekeeping products have been known for their role such as to provide high-value products as a source of income and nutrition value (FAO, 2015). Beekeeping is an environmentally friendly intervention, provides employment, education, food, and significant contribution to plant diversity, conservation, and honey bees as famous pollinators improves agriculture crop production (Bradbear, 2009). The tropical people depend on very smallscale crop production relying on shifting cultivation that clears vegetation, and beekeeping is a panacea for sustainable community development and biodiversity conservation (Minja & Nkumilwa, 2016). Tanzania had a capacity of 9.2 million bee colonies and the potential production of 138,000 tons of honey and 625 tons of beeswax annually (URT, 2014). The Tanzania Beekeeping Policy (URT, 1998) mentions beekeeping as among potential socio-economic activities that sustain biodiversity because the honey products depend on protected vegetation playing a vital role as a source of bee fodder

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