News

Global warming has led Turkish beekeepers to alternative products

Honey
Published Aug 11, 2023

Tridge summary

The Manisa Metropolitan Municipality has established a Beekeeping Training and Queen Bee Production Center in response to the decrease in honey production caused by climate change. The center provides training to beekeepers to produce alternative products such as queen bees, royal jelly, pollen, propolis, and bee venom. The trainees specialize in royal jelly milking and queen bee production and aim to contribute to the future of the industry and add value to the country's economy.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

Global warming has led beekeepers to alternative products Beekeepers affected by global warming are improving themselves with education Rural Services Department Head Yılmaz Usta: "There are enough bee colonies in our country, but our main problem is the decrease in yield and quality due to not using high quality queen bees" Beekeeping Technician Hüseyin Balkaya: "Honey It does not have the potential to develop the economy in a single business" Beekeeping Training and Queen Bee Production Center trainee Murtaza Akar: "I aim to provide added value to the country's economy with royal jelly production" MANİSA - While honey production has decreased in beekeeping due to the vegetation affected due to climate change, it was established by Manisa Metropolitan Municipality. At the Beekeeping Training and Queen Bee Production Center, trainees receive training to produce alternative products such as queen bee, royal jelly, pollen, propolis and bee venom. Specializing in royal jelly milking ...
Source: Sondakika
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