Bees for Development Journal Edition 61 - December 2001

Page 13

Beekeeping & Development 61

THE HIMALAYAN KINGDOM OF NEPAL AN ISLAND OF APIS CERANA BEEKEEPIi. by Faroog Ahmad, Uma Partap, Min Bahadur Gurung and Surendra Raj Joshi, ICIMOD, Kathmandu, Nepal

This is the fourth article bringing news about the work of the Austrian Government-funded beekeeping project at ICIMOD in Kathmandu, Nepal. ICIMOD and Austroprojekt GmbH of Vienna, Austria jointly manage the project. In B&D 60 we told you about the retreating populations of wild honeybees. Here is news of another disturbing development. The Apis cerana beekeepers of Nepal are facing new competition from organised business interest groups and development interventionists who are advocating the introduction of Apis mellifera to the isolated gene-pool areas of Apis cerana.

Apis cerana beekeeping has evolved over the centuries in the mountains of Nepal and serves both the honey needs and spiritual purposes of large populations. The combination of misguided efforts by well-meaning development workers who equate beekeeping with help but are poorly informed about the

Apis mellifera introduction is

a

buzzword

among entrepreneurs having access to the world of ‘development’: they make money by selling sub-standard hives and other equipment, weak colonies, and poorly

designed training courses that are often tied to equipment and colony purchase. Poor beekeepers are the custodians of

biodiversity, but they are the ones paying the costs of this intervention, directly and indirectly.

ICIMOD’s Austrian-supported indigenous honeybee project is addressing this issue strategically with the following initiatives:

importance and advantages of indigenous bee species and opportunistic exploitation by business entrepreneurs, is having a disastrous impact on the indigenous bees and the poor

@ Setting up Apis cerana selection and multiplication processes at grass-roots level

mountain farmers. Expansion of Apis mellifera by interest groups is not only threatening the

® Building the capacities of farmers, beekeepers, and beekeeping organisations

indigenous honeybee populations but is also depriving poor people of their livelihood options. The major problems are: @ Transfer of Apis mellifera diseases and parasites to indigenous bee populations

(and of indigenous parasites to introduced Apis mellifera colonies); ® Competition for food and nesting sites; ® Loss of pollination services with an adverse impact on both crops and indigenous

mountain flora; @ Business entrepreneurs offering costly but

poor management training and inferior equipment, and supplying weak and

so that this indigenous honeybee can beat the challenges of productivity;

the field of Apis cerana management and promotion; in

@ Advocating the ideas of conservation-based

apiculture among policy makers, development workers, and donors through networking;

MORE PROJECT NEWS Organisation and capacity building for honey hunters through Appreciative Participatory Planning and Action. ICIMOD's beekeeping project is trying to understand and support the honey hunting communities that work with Apis dorsata and

Apis laboriosa. We want to help these extremely poor and excluded people through training and help with networking, but first we need to work with them to discover their

strengths and needs and develop a common vision for the future. For this, we have chosen an Appreciative Participatory Planning and Action (APPA) approach. The main aims are to identify and build on past achievements

@ Sharing knowledge and experiences among

and existing strengths within the honey hunting communities, establish a consensus

farmers, development workers, policy makers, and academics on the value of Apis cerana in managed crop pollination;

on a shared vision of the future, and develop strategies and partnerships to achieve that vision. As a first step, the project arranged a

@ Raising awareness of the potentially

damaging impact of introducing Apis mellifera to highland areas with established Apis cerana populations.

diseased Apis mellifera colonies;

two-day training programme on APPA for the project team members and other ICIMOD staff facilitated by Mr Chandi Chapagai.

The first APPA exercise was carried out with the honey hunters of Taprang and Sikles villages in Kaski District of Nepal, with the

@ Dependence on external resources

help of the local NGO ‘Annapurna Beekeeping

and skills; and

and Environment Promotion’. Nine honey hunters participated and designed their shared

@ Low emphasis on indigenous knowledge

and skills.

vision for the future and strategies to achieve

Farmers who are persuaded to take up beekeeping with Apis mellifera lose money, bees, pollination services, and their confidence

‘4-D’ cycle: Discovery, Dream, Design, and Delivery. We will bring you more news about this in a later edition of B&D. it, using a

beekeeping management. Farmers who do not agree lose their local colonies to diseases and parasites against which the indigenous in

A new video from ICIMOD describing work on pollination is reviewed in Bookshelf on

Apis cerana populations have no defence.

page 15.

A Bees for Development publication


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Bees for Development Journal Edition 61 - December 2001 by Bees for Development - Issuu