Stingless Bee Nest Cerumen and Propolis, Volume 2

Stingless Bee Nest Cerumen and Propolis, Volume 2

Bankova, Vassya; Vit, Patricia; Popova, Milena; Roubik, David W

Springer International Publishing AG

06/2024

513

Dura

Inglês

9783031438868

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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Part. I. Chemical composition of cerumen, plant resins and propolis.- Chapter. 1. Propolis of Vietnamese stingless bees: Chemistry and plant origin .- Chapter. 2. Extraction of Tetragonula laeviceps cerumen, its total phenolic content and antioxidant activity.- Chapter. 3. Scaptotrigona mexicana propolis use in pasture silage: 1. Inhibition of pathogenic microbes, and 2. Feeding effect on growth of lambs.- Chapter. 4. Metabolites from microbial cell factories in stingless bee nests.- Chapter. 5. Bibliometric landscaping of the yeast Starmerella (Ascomycota), a genus proposed in 1998.- Chapter. 6. Pot-honey, cerumen and propolis of Axestotrigona ferruginea (Lepeletier, 1836) from Nigeria.- Chapter. 7. Volatile and sensory profile of cerumen, plant resin deposit, and propolis of a Tetragonisca angustula (Latreille, 1811) nest from Merida, Venezuela.- Part. II. Bioactivity of stingless bee cerumen, propolis and geopropolis.- Chapter. 8. Anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial and antioxidant activity of propolis and geopropolis produced by stingless bees.- Chapter. 9. Cerumen and propolis of an Indian stingless bee (Apidae: Meliponini) Tetragonula iridipennis (Smith, 1854): Botanical origin and biological activities.- Chapter. 10. Botanical origin, chemical composition, and bioactive properties of propolis of stingless bees from Argentina.- Chapter. 11. Chemical composition and therapeutic properties of geopropolis and propolis of stingless bees from Brazil: A review.- Chapter. 12. Diversity and biological activities of propolis of some Indonesian stingless bees.- Chapter. 13. Stingless bee propolis in pharmacology: Some applied cellular and molecular mechanisms.- Part III. Cultural uses and commercial products.- Chapter. 14. From Extraction to Meliponiculture? An Ethnobiological Synthesis of a Long-Standing Process in Argentina.- Chapter. 15. Production, resiniferous plants, chemistry, and therapeutical uses of Tetragonula biroi (Friese, 1898) propolis from the Philippines.- Part. IV. Sustainable stingless bee keeping and conservation.- Chapter. 16. Large-scale breeding of stingless bees: A plea for sustainable stingless bee keeping and native bee-plant-forest conservation in the Chaco region of Argentina.- Chapter. 17. Sustainable stingless bee keeping and conservation of bee-plant resources in Costa Rica.- Part. V. Marketing and standards of cerumen and propolis.- Chapter. 18. Marketing and standards of cerumen, resins, geopropolis and propolis from Brazilian stingless bees.- Appendix. A. List of Bee Taxa.- Appendix. B. Ethnic Names of Stingless Bees.- Appendix. C. Taxonomic Index of Plant Families.- Appendix. D. List of Plant Taxa Used by Bees.- Appendix E. Common Names of Plants Used by Bees.- Appendix. F. Chemical Substances of Beeswax, Cerumen and Propolis.- Appendix.G. Chemical Classes of Beeswax, Cerumen and Propolis Compounds.- Appendix. H. Microorganisms Associated with Stingless Bees or Used to Test Antimicrobial Activity, or Producing Metabolites in Materials of the Nest.- Index.
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Entomology;meliponiculture;Cerumen;honey;biodiversity