Condition and Honey Productivity of Honeybee Colonies Depending on Type of Supplemental Feed for Overwintering

Animals (Basel). 2023 Jan 17;13(3):323. doi: 10.3390/ani13030323.

Abstract

Harvested honey is usually replaced by an alternative sugar to overwinter honeybee colonies. Supplementation of winter stores with beet or cane sucrose is safe for colonies and does not cause winter mortality. Despite this, there are hypotheses that supplementation of inverted sugars has the potential to give better results in overwintering, spring growth, and honey production of the colonies, because bees are consuming already cleaved feed. Therefore, we compared the condition parameters and honey production in 70 colonies at four apiaries overwintered with stores from sucrose or inverted sugars. No statistically significant differences in dependence on the type of the supplemental feed were found. Inverted sugar was more expensive than sucrose for feeding colonies. Economic efficiency, physiological consequences, and other disadvantages of using invert syrups are discussed.

Keywords: beekeeping; feeding; growth; honeybee colony; inverted sugar; strength; sucrose; syrup.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by donations of Elitbau, Ltd. and Konica Minolta Business Solutions Czech, Ltd.