Stingless Bees Create Health Buzz
By Janel Shorthouse, ABC, 12 June, 2012
It's time for the European honey bee and the bumble bee to
step aside, because the lesser known Australian native stingless bee is proving
its medical worth in modern health solutions.
Research is currently underway to discover whether stingless
bees, also known as Australian sugarbag bees (Tetragonula carbonaria) hold
similar antimicrobial properties as discovered in the celebrated Manuka honey.
The secrets all lie in a sticky by-product called propolis
that is delicately woven by the bees into the beeswax during nest construction.
Propolis is a mixture of plant resins enriched with bee
secretions believed to protect the colony within the hive from dangerous
pathogens.
While extensive research attests to the therapeutic
properties of honeybee (Apis mellifera) propolis, the chemical and biological
properties of the propolis from Australian stingless bees are largely unknown.
Flavia Massaro of Italy has dedicated the last ten years of
her life to studying propolis from Australian stingless bees, and hopes to
uncover its chemical properties during her research scholarship and PhD at the
University of the Sunshine Coast.
Her enthusiasm for the little black Aussie insect is
infectious, as she describes opening a stingless bee hive.
"When we open the hive box, it's like Christmas Day,
all the chemicals are right there in front of us.
"Bees are a bit like chemists themselves. They are able
to pick up plant odorants with their antennae from a few kilometres away to
determine which plants they will visit for nectar and resin foraging.
"After foraging on plant resins, bees mix them with
beeswax to make propolis ...this mixture is used as a building material by
stingless bees to make cells for their progeny (brood), and for their food
(pollen and honey).
Flavia says propolis is a powerful chemical weapon used
against hive-enemies such as the small hive beetle that bees embalm to keep
their colony safe, and to preserve their honey.
"Propolis and honey can be beneficial to humans also,
as it can be used in medicines such as antimicrobial preparations and for wound
healing," says Flavia…
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