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Badger friendly initiative


Report summary and introduction


Hive protection


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As suggested by both their common and scientific names (Mellivora capensis means "honey eater of the Cape"),  honey badgers have always been associated with bees. Apart from man, they are the most destructive mammalian predators of honeybees in Africa and they can and do cause substantial losses to both traditional and commercial beekeepers.  While honey is not a necessary part of a honey badger's diet, the highly nutritious bee brood is a sought after delicacy. and this brings them into conflict with beekeepers. 

Tthroughout Africa, where badgers still occur, traditional beekeepers hang their bark hives from trees to minimize damage from badgers as they have done for generations. While traditional beekeepers are remarkably fatalistic about the 2 –7 % of hives they still lose to badgers each season, commercial beekeepers are less able to support this level of loss. Jonathan Kingdon in his treatise on East African Mammals (1989) showed that despite the precautions taken by traditional beekeepers 2700 hives from a total of 24 000 in Tanzania were damaged by badgers in a single year, and concluded that “modern apiculture is less prepared to lose 10% or more of its production to these animals.” Reports of badgers raiding apiaries have been recorded from South Africa, Botswana, Angola, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zaire, Kenya, Uganda, Senegal, Togo-Benin, Nigeria, Ethiopia and Somalia (Hepburn & Radloff 1998).   

A survey of the beekeeper –badger conflict in Western Cape Province in South Africa, completed in 2001 by K. Begg, revealed that honey badgers were causing direct losses exceeding R500 000  ($62 500) annually in this area alone. More than 80 % of beekeepers surveyed revealed that they had experienced problems from badgers and more than half admitted to killing them. Predictably, hives were most frequently damaged by badgers in areas where they are placed on the ground in indigenous vegetation that supports both good bee forage (flowering plants) and healthy populations of badgers. 

Download full survey report (80 pages, 1.6 M)

"Conflict between beekeepers and honey badgers Mellivora capensis

with reference to their conservation status and distribution in South Africa"

The good news is that unlike many other farmer-carnivore conflicts there are cost effective solutions to this one and there is therefore no rational justification, whether economic or ethical  for honey badgers to be killed. These are solutions provided by beekeepers for beekeepers, and in some cases, they have been used for more than 50 years. With an average cost of only R50 (US$ 8) per hive as an initial outlay, hive protection saves a beekeeper hundreds of thousands of rand compared to potential honey badger damage. While most beekeepers prefer to raise their hives on stands or trestles at least a metre off the ground to keep them out of reach of the badgers, they can also be secured on the ground with metal straps, pallets or wire.  See the link on hive protection methods to see some of the innovative methods applied.

To ensure effective conservation of honey badger it is crucial that more beekeepers adopt these “badger-friendly” practices as part and parcel of their profession, particularly when their hives are placed in indigenous vegetation and on the borders of protected areas.

Currently, beekeeping organizations and conservation agencies and NGOs, together with retailers and the public are working together to create a win / win solution to help both beekeepers and honey badgers. Joan Isham has been appointed as a full time extension officer and coordinator of the initiative, which aims to inform and assist beekeepers on a one-to one basis with hive protection methods, to educate the public and landowners about honey badgers and to provide positive incentives for badger-friendly beekeeping. See the link to the "Badger Friendly Initiative" for more information.

 

Traditional bark hive hung in tree to prevent badger damage (Zambia)

 

 

Commercial beekeepers working on a hive protected from honey badger damage

Honey badger caught in a gin trap set by a commercial beekeeper

 

 Distribution of apiaries in South Africa where damage has been sustained by honey badgers since 1960 (n=179 records).  

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                             Badger graphics by Holly Rutter      Updated: April 13, 2004      © Keith & Colleen Begg                                

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