Experts say the bee species keeps the Amazon's ecosystems pollinated and produces honey with medicinal properties ...
Many stingless bees are native to Peru, where they pollinate the Amazon's diverse plants and food crops. Luis García Wild, stingless bees have been granted legal rights in some parts of Peru, the ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
Stingless Bees Outlasted Dinosaurs—But Can Legal Rights Shield Them Now?
Stingless bees are so ancient that they shared the planet with the dinosaurs. For the past 80 million years, stingless bees ...
PETBOOK magazine on MSN
Stingless bees granted rights as the world’s first insects
In a groundbreaking move with international significance, insects—specifically stingless bees from the Peruvian Amazon—have ...
Richar Antonio Demetrio is the first Indigenous Asháninka scientist to publish in a high-impact journal, combining traditional ecological knowledge with scientific methodology to study meliponiculture ...
Researchers in Brazil identified anti-inflammatory properties of a cream made with the propolis of Amazon stingless bees, with results similar to commercial healing ointments. Stingless bees ...
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Honey-making stingless bees in the Peruvian Amazon become the first insects to gain legal rights
Wild, stingless bees have been granted legal rights in some parts of Peru, the latest effort in the growing global movement to protect animals by giving them similar status as people and companies.
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