Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)

Studies were made on the bee visitation of 6 quince cultivars and on the foraging behaviour of honeybees at quince flowers for 3 consecutive years. The bee visitation was highly intense because both the plantation and its surrounding was overpopulated by honeybee colonies. Some 5.5 bee visits were...

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Main Authors: P. Benedek, T. Szabó, J. Nyéki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Debrecen 2000-06-01
Series:International Journal of Horticultural Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/IJHS/article/view/109
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spelling doaj-e5979ef85d6d4846a71119ec5dfb92e02020-11-25T02:54:34ZengUniversity of DebrecenInternational Journal of Horticultural Science1585-04042676-931X2000-06-016310.31421/IJHS/6/3/109Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)P. Benedek0T. Szabó1J. Nyéki2West Hungarian University, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, H-9201 Mosonmagyaróvár, HungaryFruit Research Station, H-4244 Újfehértó, HungaryDebrecen University, Centre of Agricultural Sciences, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary Studies were made on the bee visitation of 6 quince cultivars and on the foraging behaviour of honeybees at quince flowers for 3 consecutive years. The bee visitation was highly intense because both the plantation and its surrounding was overpopulated by honeybee colonies. Some 5.5 bee visits were counted in average at 50 opening quince flowers in 10 minutes and some 9.7 flowers were visited of the 50 ones observed meanwhile. This equals some 7 bee visits per flower per day per in good weather. Bee visitation, however, was variable and it was greatly different in the three consecutive years with fairly favourable weather. Some cultivars tended to be more and others less visited by honeybees than the others but these differences were not consequent at each occasion. No consequent relationship between the weather and the bee visitation of quince trees could be recognised. It was concluded that .other factors were responsible for the variable nature of the bee activity at quince. Most honeybees tended to collect pollen (51.6% in average for the 3 years) and usually much less gathered for nectar only (19.9%), and the rest of them were mixed behaviour foragers gathering for both (28.5%). There were some slight differences in the foraging behaviour of honeybees at some cultivars but these differences were not always consequent in consecutive years. Also the nectar production of flowers failed to affect the bee visitation and the foraging behaviour of honeybees definitely. For the variable nature of bee visitation and bee behaviour at quince flowers, supplementary pollination is needed to achieve as high set of fruits as high is required to a good crop at quince (at least 20-25% because the flower density is low of this fruit tree species). Since the intensity of bee visitation at the flowers is the only reliable estimate of the necessity of supplementary bee pollination further research is needed to explore the relationship between the number of honeybee visits and the consequent fruit set at quince.   https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/IJHS/article/view/109quince (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)cultivarshoneybeesbee visitationforaging behaviourpollination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. Benedek
T. Szabó
J. Nyéki
spellingShingle P. Benedek
T. Szabó
J. Nyéki
Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
International Journal of Horticultural Science
quince (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
cultivars
honeybees
bee visitation
foraging behaviour
pollination
author_facet P. Benedek
T. Szabó
J. Nyéki
author_sort P. Benedek
title Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
title_short Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
title_full Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
title_fullStr Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
title_full_unstemmed Honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
title_sort honeybee (apis mellifera l.) visitation at the flowers of quince cultivars (cydonia oblonga mill.)
publisher University of Debrecen
series International Journal of Horticultural Science
issn 1585-0404
2676-931X
publishDate 2000-06-01
description Studies were made on the bee visitation of 6 quince cultivars and on the foraging behaviour of honeybees at quince flowers for 3 consecutive years. The bee visitation was highly intense because both the plantation and its surrounding was overpopulated by honeybee colonies. Some 5.5 bee visits were counted in average at 50 opening quince flowers in 10 minutes and some 9.7 flowers were visited of the 50 ones observed meanwhile. This equals some 7 bee visits per flower per day per in good weather. Bee visitation, however, was variable and it was greatly different in the three consecutive years with fairly favourable weather. Some cultivars tended to be more and others less visited by honeybees than the others but these differences were not consequent at each occasion. No consequent relationship between the weather and the bee visitation of quince trees could be recognised. It was concluded that .other factors were responsible for the variable nature of the bee activity at quince. Most honeybees tended to collect pollen (51.6% in average for the 3 years) and usually much less gathered for nectar only (19.9%), and the rest of them were mixed behaviour foragers gathering for both (28.5%). There were some slight differences in the foraging behaviour of honeybees at some cultivars but these differences were not always consequent in consecutive years. Also the nectar production of flowers failed to affect the bee visitation and the foraging behaviour of honeybees definitely. For the variable nature of bee visitation and bee behaviour at quince flowers, supplementary pollination is needed to achieve as high set of fruits as high is required to a good crop at quince (at least 20-25% because the flower density is low of this fruit tree species). Since the intensity of bee visitation at the flowers is the only reliable estimate of the necessity of supplementary bee pollination further research is needed to explore the relationship between the number of honeybee visits and the consequent fruit set at quince.  
topic quince (Cydonia oblonga Mill.)
cultivars
honeybees
bee visitation
foraging behaviour
pollination
url https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/IJHS/article/view/109
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AT tszabo honeybeeapismelliferalvisitationattheflowersofquincecultivarscydoniaoblongamill
AT jnyeki honeybeeapismelliferalvisitationattheflowersofquincecultivarscydoniaoblongamill
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