Apis mellifera adami

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Cretan honey bee
Scientific classification
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A. m. adami
Trinomial name
Apis mellifera adami
Ruttner, 1975

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Apis mellifera adami (often misspelled "adamii") is a honey bee subspecies from the Mediterranean area, endemic to Crete.

Taxonomy

A sub-species of Apis mellifera (the common honey-bee),[1] is the Cretan bee as classified by Ruttner 1975 and named by him after Brother Adam. The population on Crete has a similar genotype to Grecian populations, but Cretan bees are a more mixed population due to breeding and beekeeping practices (no pure populations on the island) (Harizanis & Odos).[2]

bee-keeping

Western Cretan beehives are constructed of terracotta, wood and wicker. On the east of the island the hives are always ceramic. (Baumann 1993: 166).[3]

See also

bee domestication

References

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Friedrich Ruttner (1975). Die Kretische Biene, Apis mellifica adami [The Cretan bee]. Kretische Die Biene, Apis mellifica adami [The Cretan bee]. Allgemeine Deutsche Imkerzeitung, 9(10), pp. Deutsche Allgemeine Imkerzeitung, 9 (10), pp. 271-272. 271-272.

External links

  • A.Gönülşen THE MIDDLE EAST TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY FEATURE EXTRACTION OF HONEYBEE FOREWINGS AND HINDLEGS USING IMAGE PROCESSING AND ACTIVE CONTOURS Middle East Technical University2004 [Retrieved 2011-12-20] thesis states that A.m.adamii populate Cyprus
  • G. W. Elderkin The Bee of Artemis The American Journal of Philology Vol. 60, No. 2 (1939), pp. 203-213 (article consists of 11 pages) Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press → JSTOR (part of ITHAKA)