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BOOK REVIEWS

The Tears of Re: Beekeeping painted four scenes of early beekeeping. as The Sacred Bee, by Hilda Ransome,
in Ancient Egypt Sadly, the most tantalizing vignette, in but discusses information conveyed by
Gene Kritsky which a man kneels before nine horizontal artifacts. They show, for example, that
2015; 160 pages, 103 plates beehives, only partially survives. He holds the ancient Egyptians understood that
Oxford University Press, New York, NY an oval object in one hand, cupping his bees visited flowers. A partial relief in the
ISBN: 978-0-199-36138-0 other hand over the opening that faces tomb of Ankhor depicts a man beckoning
$29.95 (hardcover) the hives. Hieroglyphs label his actions the bees to come toward a large tree, per-
nft, translated as “to blow”; the root of haps the earliest recognition that honey
According to a papy- this word means “emitting a breath or bees worked plants to produce honey.
rus written around a little sound.” In Eva Crane’s The World The role of bees as pollinators was not
300 BCE, the Egyp- History of Beekeeping and Honey Hunting yet known, and the pollen transported
tia n su n g o d Re (1999), she describes the practice among on the bee’s corbicula was believed to
“wept and the tears present-day, traditional Egyptian beekeep- be wax. The book addresses not only the
from his eyes fell ers of “calling” the queen during swarm methods of ancient beekeeping, but also
on the ground and season, when colonies split to reproduce: the hierarchical organization of beekeep-
turned into a bee.” The beekeeper smoked the bees from ers, the use of hive products in medicine,
This origin story sets the front and “called” the bees several and other ramifications of apiculture in
the scene for The Tears of Re, in which times. The call, which was described Egyptian culture.
author Gene Kritsky explores archaeo- as kak, kak, or kak, kak, kaak, or ee, This subject matter will appeal to stu-
logical evidence of early beekeeping and ee, imitates a sound known as pip- dents, beekeepers interested in history,
its place in Egyptian culture. Kritsky, ing, made by young virgin queens… and professors teaching the development
who received a Fulbright Scholar grant Any virgin queens free in the hive of apiculture, but readers should be pre-
to teach entomology at Minya Univer- or still in their cells were likely to pared for the detailed, technical text. It
sity in Upper Egypt in the early 1980s, reply to his “calling,” in which case contains a timeline in the front, but the
has been smitten with both bees and the beekeeper knew that the colony many names and transitions between
Egyptian history for years. In his new- would swarm unless he took action ancient rulers were, at times, a bit bewil-
est book, he emphasizes the difference (page 169). dering. Deeper historical and cultur-
between honey hunting and the birth al context in the text itself would have
of beekeeping. Humans have harvested If the solar-temple vignette depicts the been helpful to those who approach the
honey for at least 8,000 years, robbing same process, Kritsky writes, “then this book with a passion for beekeeping, but
combs from wild colonies, but the Egyp- technique of calling queens has been only superficial knowledge of the reign
tian civilization was the first to practice practiced for over 4,500 years, and the of the pharaohs.
large-scale, organized beekeeping. ancient Egyptians’ understanding of bee In reading The Tears of Re, I was
The first known archaeological evi- behavior was much more advanced than reminded of The Battle of the Books, a sat-
dence of human-made beehives comes we might have guessed.” ire penned by Jonathan Swift in 1704. In it,
from Egypt’s Old Kingdom, when pharaoh Throughout his book, Kritsky details library books spring to life and spar about
Newoserre Any built his spectacular solar what we can learn about ancient bee- whether modern science trumps ancient
temple in the 25th century BCE. On five keeping from fragmentary archeological wisdom. While the books are arguing, a
limestone blocks, together measuring only evidence. He doesn’t explore the myths bee escapes from a spider’s web. In Swift’s
two feet by six inches, artists etched and and folklore captured in other texts such telling, the self-sufficient spider, with its
complicated but fragile web, represents
Read more American Entomologist book reviews online at modern science. The bee, working coop-
http://ae.oxfordjournals.org/content/62/3 eratively with her colony-mates to cre-
ate “sweetness and light” from countless

194 American Entomologist • Fall 2016


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flowers, represents the ancients and their to “life under bark” was a beneficial life- biology and ecology arguably rivals that
collective wisdom. Kritsky’s exploration of style change. Other key innovations in this of most other insects. While not particu-
beekeeping in ancient Egypt engages in a group include symbioses with microbes, larly well known, higher forms of sociality
similar collective investigation, where the social behavior, and unusual reproduc- have evolved repeatedly in the Scolyti-
sum of the parts outweighs the individu- tive strategies. nae, including gregariousness; paren-
al components. Each relief he examines, In Bark Beetles: Biology and Ecology of tal care by the mother, father, or both;
every beeswax statue or papyrus, adds a Native and Invasive Species, 33 authors and delayed dispersal of adult offspring
small bit of wisdom that helps paint a contributed their expertise, resulting in that aid in the care of younger siblings.
vivid picture. By slowing down and con- the first detailed and thorough synthe- Most male insects leave immediately or
templating the rites of early beekeepers, sis of the biology, ecology, phylogeny, soon after copulation, but males of some
we gain increased appreciation for the and management of bark beetles from a scolytine species exhibit prolonged resi-
sweetness and light honey bees provided global perspective. Despite the multi-au- dency and often remain around the gal-
our ancestors. thor format, continuity among writing lery until oviposition ceases. (Would Sig-
Today, Egyptian beekeepers are mod- styles makes the book seamless to read mund Freud have been intrigued by the
ernizing, adopting moveable frame hives. and the 15 chapters are arranged in a millions of years of incestuous breeding
The number of traditional mud hives, logical order from fundamental concepts between brothers and sisters and, occa-
estimated at 124,000 in 1994, dropped to management strategies and impacts. sionally, mothers and sons?) As evident
precipitously to 7,700 by 2004. This The book is particularly well timed due to in Bark Beetles, these and other biologi-
ancient form of beekeeping—practiced continued outbreaks of tree-killing bark cal complexities have resulted in several
since the pyramids first rose toward the beetles, range expansions associated with species being used as model organisms
heavens—will soon disappear. Our bee, climate change, and proliferation of exotic for diverse disciplines, including bio-
ensnared in the spider’s web, may not species in non-native habitats. logical invasions, population dynamics,
escape its fate this time, but we can enjoy Bark beetle taxonomy originated with disturbance ecology, chemical ecology,
this record of her life that began when Carl Linnaeus, who provided the first four microbial symbioses, social evolution,
the sun god cried. species descriptions in 1758—although he and coevolution.
Kirsten Traynor grouped them with the dermestids. Bark Outbreaks of tree-killing bark beetles in
Department of Entomology beetles are currently recognized as spe- North America and Europe are among the
University of Maryland, College Park cialized members of the “true weevils” in most destructive forest disturbances, in
College Park, MD 202 the subfamily Scolytinae. Many scolytine some cases outranking fires, hurricanes,
ktraynor@umd.edu species are ambrosia beetles that feed on and tornadoes in their devastation. Some
DOI: 10.1093/ae/tmw069 symbiotic fungi rather than host-plant species are even recognized as “landscape
tissues; Bark Beetles appropriately han- engineers” due to their detrimental impact
dles the ambrosia beetles as an ecolog- on stand composition during outbreaks.
ical guild and not a taxonomic designa- Warming climates have resulted in several
Bark Beetles: tion, since their fungus-farming lifestyle species expanding their ranges and exhib-
Biology and Ecology of arose multiple times (about 40–60 million iting outbreaks in regions that previously
Native and Invasive Species years before humans began domesticating were too cold. The variable impact of cli-
Fernando E. Vega and plants for agriculture). Yes, fungus farm- matic extremes on host tree susceptibility
Richard W. Hofstetter (eds.) ing also originated once in ants and once is also considered in Bark Beetles. While
2015; 640 pages in termites, but ambrosia beetles hold few bark beetles kill healthy trees, those
Elsevier/Academic Press, London, UK the distinction of multiple independent that do are some of the most destructive
ISBN: 978-0-124-17156-5 origins. Many of the remaining bark bee- pests of trees, including members of the
tles that are not fungus farmers still have genera Dendroctonus, Ips, Tomicus, and
Bark beetles exhibit obligate associations with microbes. Bark Scolytus that are specifically highlighted
incredible diversity Beetles covers some key mechanisms, in several chapters. Destructive pests of
and complexity in and also emphasizes outstanding ques- horticultural trees, such as the coffee berry
their behavior, ecol- tions about the impact of these micro- borer, Hypothenemus hampei (Ferrari), are
ogy, and population bial symbionts on bark beetle biology also individually addressed. Bark Beetles
dynamics. The vast and population dynamics. The authors also covers the diverse interactions that
majority of the 6,000- also address contemporary alternatives drive bark beetle abundance—from sym-
plus extant species to classic paradigms on symbiont patho- biotic microbes to predators, parasitoids,
colonize dead or dying host plants, and genicity and host defenses. For instance, and varied host resistance mechanisms.
are important nutrient recyclers. Only fungal symbionts may not be required to The book does a fine job synthesizing
about 1% of species attack and kill healthy overwhelm the defenses of healthy trees, decades of research on the mechanisms
hosts, but several of these are among the as once proposed; instead, they may be of bark beetle outbreaks, but recognizes
most destructive tree pests on a global and more important as a nutritional supple- that their population dynamics are noto-
regional scale. Considering the diversity ment for the beetles. riously complex and outbreaks are diffi-
and ecological success of bark beetles, it Perhaps the most impressive theme cult to predict. Challenges still lie ahead,
appears that their transition, some 90–120 evident throughout Bark Beetles is that the particularly as a result of climate change
million years ago, from “life in the green” diversity and complexity of bark beetle and range expansion.

196 American Entomologist • Fall 2016


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on 21 March 2018

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