Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Bees are turning the sticky-sweet secretions of spotted lanternflies into honey—and some people love the smoky-smelling stuff
Ever since they first arrived in America in 2014, invasive spotted lanternflies have been making their presence known. Native ...
Students at Weydon School have been creating a buzz with their award-winning honey production. The secondary school has taken ...
Beekeeping groups across the U.S. and Canada are calling for stricter testing and certification to discourage the sale of ...
Four major North American beekeeping organizations today released the first-ever North American Bee Strategy, a coordinated, continent-wide plan to protect honey bees, strengthen the viability of ...
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (WBTW) — This new brunch spot in Myrtle Beach is bringing sunshine to your plate, serving up a fresh take on ingredients, flavor, and atmosphere. After two years of planning, this ...
About 20,000 years ago, a family of owls lived in a cave. Sometimes, they would cough up owl pellets containing the bones of ...
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. Honey bees across the country are under attack from tiny, eight-legged parasitic mites. These mites burrow between the ...
Honey bees survive by eating the honey they’ve stored up over the past year. Many beekeepers augment their bees’ food by ...
A honey bee colony is a superorganism; working together as a unified entity with each bee working individually but ...
Honey bees are vital to agriculture in the Pacific Northwest. But it’s increasingly difficult to keep colonies alive from year to year, causing concern about the future of our food systems. But now an ...
A strange new honey, darker, smokier and born from an invasive pest, is drawing global attention, scientific curiosity and ...
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