2019
DOI: 10.21521/mw.6347
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Origin and protection of middle-European bees in Europe

Abstract: The population of the honey bee, Apis mellifera, continues to shrink. The middle-European bee, Apis m. mellifera, is particularly at risk in Europe. The drop in the number of middle-European bees is so huge that the insect is under the threat of extinction. Today, they live on small areas covered by the protection of genetic resources. Apis m. mellifera is protected mainly in areas where this species evolved: for instance, in Switzerland, Latvia, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, France, Germany, Poland or Rus… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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(59 reference statements)
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“…In general, the ecosystem services associated with beekeeping include pollination and habitat conservation [31,32]. However, there is a new trend that includes economic, environmental, and cultural ecosystem services [5,10].…”
Section: Utilities Generated By Beekeepingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In general, the ecosystem services associated with beekeeping include pollination and habitat conservation [31,32]. However, there is a new trend that includes economic, environmental, and cultural ecosystem services [5,10].…”
Section: Utilities Generated By Beekeepingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Vrabcová and Hájek [9], approximately 90% of the benefits of honey bees afforded to mankind lie precisely in their pollination capacity. Consequently, beekeeping and honey bees are providers of ecosystem services [31,32] and thus generate public goods (i.e., those that are characterized by being non-excludable), which means that if the product is offered to one person, it is offered to all others (e.g., a landscape of great diversity) and is non-rivalrous in terms of consumption (i.e., if one person consumes this public good, it does not prevent another from also consuming it). This gives rise to the existence of people who, without having participated in the transaction or contributed to its financing, benefit from it (free-riders), mostly derived from positive externalities (collateral effects derived from the existence of a public good).…”
Section: Pollinationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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