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Soyez constructifs et... courtois ! Par avance merci pour les apinautes qui dialoguent avec vous ou qui simplement vous lisent
Production de la miel
- AudreyB
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10 Mai 2002 00:00 #20744
par AudreyB
Production de la miel a été créé par AudreyB
Bonjour à tous,
Quelqu'un peut me dire qui sont les premiers dans la histoire qui on fait production de la miel?
Quelqu'un peut me dire qui sont les premiers dans la histoire qui on fait production de la miel?
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- Bernie26
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16 Mai 2002 00:00 #20745
par Bernie26
Réponse de Bernie26 sur le sujet Production de la miel
Rock painting depicting honey gathering. Discovered in the Cuevas de la Arana near Bicorp in Valencia, Spain, from E. Hernendez-Pacheco, Museo nacional de ciences naturales, Madrid.
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16 Mai 2002 00:00 #20746
par AudreyB
Réponse de AudreyB sur le sujet Production de la miel
Tnaks for the reponses...
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24 Mai 2002 00:00 #20747
par Bernie26
Réponse de Bernie26 sur le sujet Production de la miel
www.angus.co.uk/bibba/bibborig.html#The%20origins%20of%20honeybees
The origins of honeybees
It is thought that bees originally evolved from hunting wasps which acquired a taste for nectar and decided to become vegetarians. Fossil evidence is sparse but bees probably appeared on the planet about the same time as flowering plants in the Cretaceous period, 146 to 74 million years ago. The oldest known fossil bee, a stingless bee named Trigona prisca, was found in the Upper Cretaceous of New Jersey, U.S.A., and dates from 96 to 74 million years ago. It is indistinguishable from modern Trigona. The precursor of the honeybees may have been living about this time, but fossils of the true Apis type were first discovered in the Lower Miocene (22 to 25 million years ago) of Western Germany. A bee resembling Apis dorsata but much smaller (about the size of a present day mellifera) was present in the Upper Miocene (about 12 million years ago). It is thought that Apis florea and Apis dorsata may have existed as separate species as early as the Oligocene period. It has not been possible to estimate when bees of' the Mellifera/Cerana type first appeared on Earth. Mellifera and Cerana must have acquired separate identities during the latter part of the Tertiary era. The two species were apparently physically separated at the time of the last glaciation, and there was no subsequent contact between them until that brought about by human intervention in recent times. In the post glacial period Mellifera and Cerana (and to a less extent Dorsata and Florea) have shown similar evolution into geographical subspecies, or races.
The origins of honeybees
It is thought that bees originally evolved from hunting wasps which acquired a taste for nectar and decided to become vegetarians. Fossil evidence is sparse but bees probably appeared on the planet about the same time as flowering plants in the Cretaceous period, 146 to 74 million years ago. The oldest known fossil bee, a stingless bee named Trigona prisca, was found in the Upper Cretaceous of New Jersey, U.S.A., and dates from 96 to 74 million years ago. It is indistinguishable from modern Trigona. The precursor of the honeybees may have been living about this time, but fossils of the true Apis type were first discovered in the Lower Miocene (22 to 25 million years ago) of Western Germany. A bee resembling Apis dorsata but much smaller (about the size of a present day mellifera) was present in the Upper Miocene (about 12 million years ago). It is thought that Apis florea and Apis dorsata may have existed as separate species as early as the Oligocene period. It has not been possible to estimate when bees of' the Mellifera/Cerana type first appeared on Earth. Mellifera and Cerana must have acquired separate identities during the latter part of the Tertiary era. The two species were apparently physically separated at the time of the last glaciation, and there was no subsequent contact between them until that brought about by human intervention in recent times. In the post glacial period Mellifera and Cerana (and to a less extent Dorsata and Florea) have shown similar evolution into geographical subspecies, or races.
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