Sunday, April 26th, 2026

Parasites, pesticides, malnutrition behind reasons on death of honeybees in Jumla



JUMLA: A team of the Apiculture Development Centre, Godavari, Lalitpur, arrived here to study the mass death of honeybees kept at homes has conducted its study.

At an interaction organized among bee keeping farmers, group of experts of Centre and bodies concerned of the district today, Centre Chief and apiculture expert, Tirtha Kumar Shrestha, said problems like infection, parasites, pesticides and malnutrition are reasons behind death of bees.

The bees died as there was no required amount of honey in the upper part of the honeycomb, he mentioned.

Shrestha stated that farmers should pay special attention to make honeycomb rich and nutritious as honeybees started dying if honeycomb lacks the required quantity of honey and nutrition.

“In course of study, the managerial side of beekeeping here is good. Beehives have been kept in a systematic manner,” he said, adding that malnutrition, use of pesticide in pasture are reasons behind the death of honeybees.

The sample of dead honeybees would be sent to the Centre for further study and abroad, if required, to identify the disease, mentioned Shrestha.

Publish Date : 13 September 2024 21:59 PM

Today’s News in a Nutshell

KATHMANDU: Khabarhub brings you a glimpse of major developments of

7,642 tourists enter Nepal through Kakarbhitta border point last month

JHAPA: Nepal received altogether 7,642 tourists from third countries in the

Indian tourist dies of altitude sickness in Jomsom

MUSTANG: A 63-year-old Indian tourist has died of altitude sickness

Injured mountaineer rescued

MYAGDI: A climber who sustained injuries while descending Dhaulagiri Mountain

TU gives CAN 35-day ultimatum to vacate cricket ground

KATHMANDU: Tribhuvan University has issued a 35-day ultimatum to Cricket