Bee Space: Honey Bee Social Behavior with Cameron Jack
Finding Genius Podcast
Richard Jacobs
4.4 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 22 December 2020
⏱️ 45 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Bee keeping is an ancient practice: even prehistoric cave paintings in Spain depict a keeper reaching for a hive to collect honey while holding a smoker to calm the bees. Cameron Jack shares some of the more interesting details of this ancient art with lucky listeners.
Tune in and hear
- How honey bee characteristics, bee anatomy, and evolution have led to optimal frame and hive size for beekeepers to follow,
- Why bees are considered a superorganism, which means a honey bee can't survive on its own, and is organized by queen, brooders, and workers, and
- Why Cameron Jack's prime interest is managing honey bee diseases and pests and what are the main areas of concern.
Cameron Jack holds the unusual position of one-hundred percent lecturer at the University of Florida. He's still involved in research and extension work, but his full lecturer designation means his beekeeping course list at the University of Florida is probably the most extensive college-level beekeeping instruction out there.
He teaches seven different beekeeping courses, covering everything from evolution, biology, the annual cycle involved in beekeeping, and more. The courses are complete enough to turn out people who can actively be beekeepers. In this interview, he describes everything from why 3/8 inches is a magic number to how bees find and maintain hives in the wild.
Honey bee behavioral adaptations of course take center stage. For hive building, beekeepers who want to maximize honey production must learn such behaviors to know why they might, for example, sequester the queen in the lower level. Bees build their combs vertically and are considered a superorganism—"the whole animal is the whole colony," he adds. They are able to determine their hive sizing in multiple ways and if it gets too big, they swarm—one colony becomes two.
Furthermore, the queen designation doesn't mean ruler. She's a producer, laying as many eggs as she can in a systematic spiral through her level of the comb. Cameron Jack's primary interest is the management of pests and diseases bees face like types of mites, beetles, and even wax-eating moths. While the interaction of mites and bees is the most concerning, diseases even involve microorganisms in honey bees' guts. Listen in to hear more about this amazing superorganism.
For more see the University of Florida Honey Bee Research and Extension Lab page.
Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Forget frequently asked questions common sense common knowledge or Google how about advice from a real genius |
| 0:06.8 | 95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified and licensed 5% go and beyond. They become very good at what they do. |
| 0:15.1 | But only 0.1% are real Jesus. |
| 0:18.3 | Richard Jacobs has made it his life's mission to find them for you. |
| 0:22.4 | He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field, sleep science, cancer, stem cells, |
| 0:27.2 | ketogenic diets, and more. |
| 0:28.8 | Here come the geniuses. |
| 0:30.4 | This is the Finding Genius Podcast. |
| 0:33.0 | That is Richard Jacobs. |
| 0:35.0 | Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast. |
| 0:41.0 | I have Cameron Jack is a lecturer at University of Florida, and we're going to talk about beekeeping. |
| 0:46.0 | So Cameron, thanks for coming. |
| 0:48.0 | Yeah, thanks for having me, I'm excited to be here. |
| 0:50.0 | Yeah, tell me, how did you get interested in bees? |
| 0:52.0 | Well, I got interested in bees actually from a young age. |
| 0:55.0 | My grandpa was a beekeeper. |
| 0:58.0 | And so I, um, he was also a high school principal. |
| 1:01.0 | He just used beekeeping to help supplement his income and I just kind of grew up around honey bees and beekeeping. |
| 1:06.7 | It was, you know, definitely when I was a kid it was just a weird thing my family did. |
| 1:10.1 | It wasn't something I was excited about. But then when I got a little bit older and I got into colleges about the time I kind of got it back into it and started having fun with it again and then decided to go on to graduate school and I knew I wanted to |
| 1:25.0 | study something and I thought, you know, why not honeybees? And then, you know, once I started my |
| 1:30.0 | masters and I started doing honeybee research within the first couple of weeks is what I really |
... |
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