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The Benefits of Propolis : 9

Figure 1. Honey bee with red coloured resin on her hind legs

HONEY BEE HEALTH

The Benets of Propolis


Marla Spivak, PhD
(MacArthur Fellow and McKnight Distinguished Professor in Entomology at the University of Minnesota, USA)

with propolis and stick propolis between boxes and where the frames touch the box. Despite our intentional or inadvertent attempts to select against colonies that collect lots of propolis, the bees persist, so they must need it. The most important clue about its benet comes from this fact: we know that propolis has remarkable medicinal properties for humans. It is highly antimicrobial, meaning that is it antibacterial, antifungal and even antiviral. So does it have medicinal benet to the bees?

Marla Spivak

Benet to Bee Health?


One of my previous graduate students, Mike Simone-Finstrom, became interested in the potential benets of propolis to bee health. We constructed some small ve-frame nucleus boxes and Mike painted the inside of some with a propolis extract (propolis dissolved in 70% ethanol at a known concentration). One set of boxes was painted with extract of propolis from Minnesota, another set with green propolis from Brazil.

ost beekeepers I know dislike propolis with a passion. The presence of this sticky, resinous substance in bee hives makes opening and managing colonies very difficult. Most of my clothes are permanently stained with propolis, usually on the backside from climbing into the bee truck and sitting down on a glob of it. I also was not so fond of propolis until we discovered that it has very amazing health benets to bees. I hope by the end of the article, you become a propolis convert, too. Propolis is the term beekeepers

use to refer to plant resins that bees collect and deposit in the nest cavity. Bees add varying amounts of wax to the resins but, to my knowledge, they do not modify the chemical nature of the resins.

The older bee books say that propolis is a barrier to seal cracks and provide mechanical support in the nest (reviewed in SimoneFinstrom and Spivak, 2010). But this answer is not entirely satisfactory.

Why?
There must be a reason bees go to the trouble of collecting plant resins. They are not easy to collect: bees have to scrape up the sticky resin with their mouthparts, pack it on their hind legs and, when back in the nest, other bees have to help pull it off their legs (Figure1). There is no food reward in collecting propolis they dont eat it, so why collect it?

Nest Lining
When bees nest inside hollow trees, they coat the inside of the cavity with propolis, sometimes several millimeters thick (Figure2 (overleaf)). Bees can deposit a very thick layer of propolis around the entrance to the tree cavity. They dont make this propolis envelope inside our man-made bee boxes, but they often reduce the size of the entrance

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March 2013 Vol 95 No 3

10 : The Benefits of Propolis to Honey Bee Health A third set was painted with just ethanol as a control. He put small colonies of bees in each box, paint-marked a set of newly emerged bees, and introduced them into each colony. After seven days, he collected the painted bees and examined their immune systems by measuring gene transcripts for antimicrobial peptides (see box below). He found that bees exposed to a propolis envelope for just seven days had lower bacterial loads in and on their bodies, and had quieter immune systems compared with bees in a colony with no propolis envelope. In other words, the propolis in the colony was killing off microbes in the nest, so that the bees immune systems did not have to gear up and make peptides and cellular responses that ght off infection. In essence, the propolis envelope acts as an external antimicrobial layer that enshrouds the colony, beneting bee immune defenses (SimoneFinstrom, et al, 2009). Yes, it seals cracks and probably provides structural support, but the main benet is probably its antimicrobial value.

In Human Terms
Here is an analogy of the benets of the propolis envelope in human terms. Think of a house or ofce with mould in the walls. Some peoples immune systems are chronically activated in mouldy environments, causing them to sneeze. If propolis was painted all over the walls of the house or ofce, it would probably kill the moulds, which in turn would reduce the persons immune response. Mounting an immune response, especially a chronic one, is costly to an individual and eventually takes a toll on overall health.

with colonies with no propolis envelope (Simone-Finstrom and Spivak, 2012). It is unclear how the propolis on the walls of the box helps ght off a brood infection. The mode of action of propolis is likely to come both from contact with it and from the rich smelling volatiles. More research is needed in this area.

Where is it Collected?
Two other graduate students are now pursuing other questions related to the health benets of propolis to bees. One student, Mike Wilson (at one point I was advising three students named Mike confusing!), is discovering from which plants bees collect resin. This Mike climbs trees, and collects resin from leaf buds. Then he collects individual foragers returning to the hive with plant resin on their hind legs. He analyses the resin from the plant and the resin from the bee using RPHPLC time-ofight mass spectrometry and gets a metabolic ngerprint of all the compounds present in each sample. He can match the ngerprints statistically using principle components analysis (Wilson, et al, submitted for publication). In our area, despite the presence of conifers, birch, alders and other trees, he found that bees collect resin mostly from cottonwood (Populus deltoids) and balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera). Cottonwood resin is yellow; balsam poplar resin is red. There are hybrid poplars in our area and when bees collect resin from them, this can be yellow, brown, orange or red.

Chalkbrood and Propolis


Mike Simone-Finstrom ran another clever experiment. He infected colonies with chalkbrood disease by grinding up chalkbrood mummies and homogenising them in pollen patties. He found that the number of resin foragers (per unit time) increased in colonies after infection with chalkbrood, but did not increase in uninfected colonies. The increase in the number of resin foragers was subtle, as resin foragers are relatively rare in most colonies, especially compared with pollen and nectar foragers. But the result was remarkable (SimoneFinstrom and Spivak, 2012).

Comment

Bees dont produce


antibodies but their immune systems do produce a number of proteins, or antimicrobial peptides that can fight off infection. They also have cells that can phagocytize (eat up) or encapsulate microbes. We can measure the relative amount of gene transcripts of the peptides and cellular products using real-time quantitative PCR.

Marla Spivak

Do bee colonies selfmedicate?


We are currently repeating this experiment with another bee disease, American foul brood, to see if the increase in resin foraging after infection is robust. In another experiment, Mike S-F found that colonies with a propolis envelope had less chalkbrood infection compared

Figure 2. A cross-section of a honey bee ne around the colony is coated in a layer of pr the propolis envelope (Simone-Finstrom an

Biological Activity
Mike Wilson is also testing the biological activity of the

individual resin loads against the bee pathogen, Paenibacillus larvae; the bacterium that causes American foul brood. Mike W runs these tests in the lab and has found out that balsam poplar is slightly better at inhibiting this bacterium than cottonwood resin. He has
March 2013 Vol 95 No 3

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The Benefits of Propolis to Honey Bee Health : 11 the third student, Renata Borba. Renata is testing whether bees need a full propolis envelope within the nest to help their immune system, or if just the presence of a propolis trap on top of the frames is sufcient. She also repeating the selfmedication experiment I referred to above, by infecting colonies with American foul brood (by spraying spore solution on the combs). In addition to counting returning resin foragers before and after infection, she will collect the resin loads and, using Mike Wilsons metabolomic ngerprinting techniques, determine if the bees switch resin species after infection. Do bees select resins of greater strength after infection? The jury is still out Renata will be repeating her experiments over at least two summers to obtain a large enough data set to analyse because resin foragers are relatively rare. There are many questions still unanswered and others we need to resolve further. But I do have two take home-messages for beekeepers: paint inside the boxes because it requires harvesting propolis and then dissolving it in 70% ethanol. It is easier to let the bees collect the propolis and deposit it directly where it is needed. I do not advocate feeding propolis to bees. Bees do not eat propolis. Even though it is a natural plant product, it is a powerful antibiotic. One summer, we tried feeding propolis dissolved in sugar syrup to bees and it did not cure American foul brood within the colonies. I would not feed it to my bees.

slum gum (the mess left after you have melted the wax out of old brood comb). It probably contains remnants of the silk cocoons, bee faeces and wax. But does it contain propolis? I think not. But Im very open to solid evidence to the contrary.

References
1 Simone M, Evans J, Spivak M. 2009. Resin collection and social immunity. Evolution, 63, 30163022. Simone-Finstrom M, Gardner J, Spivak M. 2010. Tactile learning in resin foraging honeybees. Behavioural Ecology & Sociobiology, 64, 16091617. Simone-Finstrom M, Spivak M. 2010. Propolis and bee health: the natural history and signicance of resin use by honey bees. Special Issue on Bee Health: Apidologie, 41, 295311. Simone-Finstrom, MD, Spivak M. 2012. Increased resin collection after parasite challenge: a case of self-medication in honey bees? PLoSOne 7(3), e34601. doi:10.1371/journal. pone.0034601

Beekeeping Lore
Lastly, I bring up a challenge to beekeeping lore. It has not been tested if bees incorporate propolis into brood cells. There seems to be a beekeeping legend that brood combs turn dark because bees deposit propolis in them. I do not think this is the case. In a tree cavity, bees DO put propolis on the cells that touch the tree wall (Figure 3). On rare occasions, I have seen some new comb look as though the rim has a very narrow band of resin around it. But I do not know how common this is, or if bees add more resin into the cell. To test this, the wax comb would need to be dissolved, ltered and the residue tested for the presence of plant resins. We have tried to dissolve brood combs in ethanol and end up with a sludge that looks like

Arnia Ltd

Messages for Beekeepers


It would be good to allow colonies to make a propolis envelope inside beekeeping equipment as it would benet the bees immune systems. You can help them do this in two simple ways: cut and staple commercial propolis traps in the inside of each brood box construct bee boxes that have unnished lumber on the inside and the rough surface will stimulate bees to line the inside of the box with propolis. I dont recommend you make your own propolis extract to

est within a tree cavity. The nest interior ropolis. Fungal growth can be seen above nd Spivak, 2010)

also determined that hybrid poplars are not nearly as good. This means that the resins have different strengths and abilities to kill off bacteria and probably other microbes.

Figure 3. New combs from a colony nesting in a tree cavity. The bees have put propolis around the rims of cells that are in contact with the tree wall. It is not clear if bees add propolis to cells within the brood nest

Presence of Propolis
This leads to the research by
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M Marla Spivak is a MacArthur Fellow a and McKnight Distinguished Professor in Entomology at the University of Minnesota. She has bred a line of honey bees, the Minnesota Hygienic line, a available commercially in the US, to t defend d f d th themselves l against diseases and parasitic mites. Current studies include the benets of propolis to honey bees and the effects of agricultural landscapes and pesticides on honey bee and native bee health.
www.bee-craft.com

Marla Spivak

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