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Reasons for Offering Bee Protein Supplement to the Bees

To prevent nutritional imbalance and poor colony development, the beekeeper can offer protein in the form of honey bee protein powder.<br><br>Contact Details of Apiary Boost:<br>Email: info@apiaryboost.com.au<br>Call: 61 402 018 963<br>Address: Windaroo 4207, Jacobs Well 4208, Branyan 4670, Australia<br>Website: https://apiaryboost.com.au/

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Reasons for Offering Bee Protein Supplement to the Bees

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  1. Reasons for Offering Bee Protein Supplement to the Bees Protein plays a very significant role in bees’ diets. In theory, bees can find all of the protein necessary for their development in the pollen they gather. A decrease in available protein resources results in reduced egg laying. This results in decreased larva output, decreased royal jelly production, and greater population loss. To make up for a deficiency that can prove fatal for the bees, beekeepers are increasingly turning to protein supplements. What do bees feed on? Adult bees feed on nectar and pollen. Nectar offers carbohydrates, bees’ energy source, which allows them to fly, produce honey, and clean the hive. As for pollen, it offers lipids, vitamins and minerals that are necessary for the bees to function appropriately as part of the colony, and protein.

  2. When do you need to give bee protein supplement? In beekeeping, protein intake is essential for several reasons. It serves to produce strong colonies for honey production, boosts colonies kept to pollinated crops, restores apiaries that have suffered losses, and provides enough dietary resources for wintering, package bees, queen breeding, and more. When the colony lacks sufficient pollen resources, this leads to decreased egg laying. This leads to fewer larvae, decreased royal jelly production, increased larva mortality, and population loss. In theory, bees can find the protein necessary for their development in the pollen they gather, stored in the hive in the form of bee bread. But some kinds of pollen are deficient in vitamins or amino acids, and certain areas do not have enough pollen, in regards to quantity or variety, to offer for all of the bees’ nutritional necessities. To make up for these deficiencies, beekeepers turn to bee protein supplement.

  3. To prevent nutritional imbalance and poor colony development, the beekeeper can offer protein in the form of honey bee protein powder. Contact Details of Apiary Boost: Email: info@apiaryboost.com.au Call: 0402 018 963, 0450 411 425 Address: Windaroo 4207, Jacobs Well 4208, Branyan 4670, Australia Website: https://apiaryboost.com.au/

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