Abstract

While Ethiopia has six species of stingless bees, indigenous knowledge of them has not been well documented. In southwestern Ethiopia, we documented the Sheka community’s knowledge of stingless bees. We used the snowball sampling technique to locate 60 experienced honey collectors, conducted semi-structured interviews, and complemented interviews with field observations during honey collection trips with interviewees. Given the scarcity of aboveground nesting stingless bees, honey collectors only collected honey from stingless bees nesting belowground. The average age of the honey collectors was 43 years, but there was much variation in both age and the number of years of experience, indicating that the tradition is handed down between generations. To find the underground nests in the field, honey collectors used several methods, including directly observing nest entrances and worker bee movement, attaching a thread to the worker bee, and listening for the humming sound of the bee’s natural enemy (wasp). Wild nests were always harvested destructively. A single farmer kept ground-nesting stingless bee colonies at his backyard using uniquely tailored wooden hives. Collected honey was used for home consumption, disease treatment, and the generation of income. Our findings illustrate the Sheka community’s deep indigenous knowledge of ground-nesting stingless bees. To facilitate the establishment of stingless bee beekeeping (meliponiculture) in the study area, we may build upon this indigenous knowledge by field research on the biology of stingless bees, taxonomic studies to assess the diversity and identity of ground-nesting stingless bees, and engineering studies to develop beekeeping practices. Together, this may allow for better income for local farmers and avoid the risk of overexploitation of wild stingless bee nests.

Highlights

  • Stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) are mostly found in the tropical and subtropical regions of the world, and there are more than twenty species in Africa (Eardley 2004; Michener 2007; Eardley and Kwapong 2013)

  • In Africa, the honey of stingless bees is mostly gathered by destructive harvesting of wild colonies (Eardley 2004; Cortopassi-Laurino et al 2006)

  • The study was conducted in the Sheka zone, located in southwestern Ethiopia (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Stingless bees (Apidae: Meliponini) are mostly found in the tropical and subtropical regions of the world, and there are more than twenty species in Africa (Eardley 2004; Michener 2007; Eardley and Kwapong 2013). Like honeybees of the genus Apis, all stingless bees in Africa are eusocial and live with many individuals in a single nest (Eardley 2004). In Africa, the honey of stingless bees is mostly gathered by destructive harvesting of wild colonies (Eardley 2004; Cortopassi-Laurino et al 2006). For example, in Tanzania and Angola, where some communities use hollow logs or clay pots as hives (Cortopassi-Laurino et al 2006). There is meliponiculture in Kenya, for example in communities near Kakamega forest and Mwingi (Macharia et al 2007). There has been a keen interest to develop meliponiculture in Ghana, Botswana

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