Hello all,

With the threat of honeybee extinction looming on the horizon, I got to thinking that rearing stingless bees could eventually supplant apiculture for the production of high-value base materials used in the biomedical industry. Unfortunately, they don’t produce much in the way of actual honey and the slow (re-)adoption of the practice has coincided with the loss of traditional knowledge and habitat destruction in Mesoamerica.

Despite many efforts to fund research programs around the world, interest in adopting meliponiculture here in North America seems next to nil. Perhaps there is a good reason behind it, but I suspect it’s merely the product of ignorance and lack of funding sources.

With that said, has anyone heard or read anything that suggests the potential for (safely and lawfully) importing these little beauties into North America? Even if you don’t know, I would love to hear everyone’s thoughts and musings on meliponine bees anyways.

  • SalamanderA
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    1 year ago

    I am originally from Yucatan, and I had the fortune of seeing several Melipona colonies back there. Not a lot of tools are needed, and they don’t sting, so many people keep colonies in their back yard in wooden boxes or logs. It is one of my plans to keep a colony when I go back :-)

  • macracanthorhynchusM
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    1 year ago

    Meliponini unfortunately can’t currently be legally imported into the U.S., but from my understanding of the Latin American species, I suspect they could be imported safely without threatening other species, (especially the most significant managed species, Apis mellifera and Bombus impatiens.) That deciskon would ultimately have to be made by USDA ARS if they were ever to be imported legally into the U.S.