UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot

M60 J2 anti-clockwise exit | Anti-Clockwise | Road Works

21 August 2025

Dozens more Afghan relocation data breaches uncovered by BBC | UK News

21 August 2025

Omek Houria Recipe: Make This Bold Tunisian Carrot Dip with Harissa – UK Times

21 August 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home ยป Scientists make ‘superfood’ that could save honeybees | UK News
News

Scientists make ‘superfood’ that could save honeybees | UK News

By uk-times.com20 August 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Georgina Rannard

Climate and science correspondent

Gwyndaf Hughes/ A close-up photograph of a honeybee with fur, wings, eyes and antennas visibleGwyndaf Hughes/

Scientists have developed a honeybee “superfood” that could protect the animals against the threats of climate change and habitat loss.

Bee colonies that ate the supplement during trials had up to 15 times more baby bees that grew to adulthood.

Honeybees are a vital part of food production and contribute to pollinating 70% of leading global crops.

“This technological breakthrough provides all the nutrients bees need to survive, meaning we can continue to feed them even when there’s not enough pollen,” senior author Professor Geraldine Wright at the University of Oxford told News.

“It really is a huge accomplishment,” she says.

Gywndaf Hughes/ A wooden frame from inside a hive that has many bees gathered around the hexagonal holesGywndaf Hughes/

Honeybees globally are facing severe declines, due to nutrient deficiencies, viral diseases, climate change and other factors. In the US, annual colony losses have ranged between 40-50% in the last decade and are expected to increase.

Beekeepers in the UK have faced serious challenges too.

Nick Mensikov, chair of the Cardiff, Vale and Valleys Beekeepers Association, told News that he lost 75% of his colonies last winter and that this has been seen across South Wales.

“Although the hives have all been full of food, the bees have just dwindled. Most of the bees survived through January, February, and then they just vanished,” he says.

Gwyndaf Hughes/ A man wearing an orange beekeeper suit with hives and trees in the background.Gwyndaf Hughes/

Nick Mensikov has kept hives for 15 years and sells honey in South Wales

Honeybees feed on pollen and nectar from flowers that contain the nutrients, including lipids called sterols that are necessary for their development.

They make honey in hives, which becomes their food source over winter when flowers have stopped producing pollen.

When beekeepers take out honey to sell, or, increasingly, when there isn’t enough pollen available, they give the insects supplementary food.

But that food is made up of protein flour, sugar and water, and has always lacked the nutrients bees require. It is like humans eating a diet without carbohydrates, amino acids, or other vital nutrients.

Sterol has always proved very difficult to manufacture, but Prof Wright has led a group of scientists for 15 years to identify which exact sterols bees need and how to engineer them.

Gwyndaf Hughes/ A woman wearing a pink t-shirt and a brown beekeeper suit stands in a field with blue and green bee hives and a greenhouse behind her Gwyndaf Hughes/

Professor Geraldine Wright was inspired to work on bee nutrition after beekeepers told her about how many of their bees were dying

In the lab at Oxford, PhD student Jennifer Chennells showed us small clear boxes of honeybees in an incubator that she feeds with different foods she has made.

She uses kitchen equipment you could find at home to make the raw ingredients, and rolls out glossy, white tubes of food.

“We put ingredients into what’s like a cookie dough, with different proteins, fats, different amounts of carbohydrate, and the micronutrients that bees need. It’s to try to work out what they like best and what’s best for them,” she says.

She pushes the tubes inside the boxes and bees nibble at the mixture.

It’s in this lab that, using gene editing, Prof Wright’s team successfully made a yeast that can produce the six sterols that bees need.

“It’s a huge breakthrough. When my student was able to engineer the yeast to create the sterols, she sent me a picture of the chromatogram that was a result of the work,” she says, referring to a chart of the substance structure.

“I still have it on the wall of my office,” she explains.

See inside the hive that tested honeybee ‘superfood’

The “superfood” was fed to bees in the lab’s hives for three months.

The results showed that colonies fed the food had up to 15 times more baby bees that made it to adulthood.

“When the bees have a complete nutrition they should be healthier and less susceptible to disease,” Prof Wright says.

Prof Wright says the food would be particularly useful during summers like this one when flowering plants appear to have stopped producing early.

Gwyndaf Hughes/ A man in an orange beekeeping suit holds a wooden frame with bees crawling over it. He is standing in a field with trees and plants.Gwyndaf Hughes/

Beekeepers often feed supplementary food to bees to sustain them

“It’s really important in years when the summer came early and bees will not have sufficient pollen and nectar to make it through the winter,” she says.

“The more months that they go without pollen, the more nutritional stress that they will face, which means that the beekeepers will have greater losses of those bees over winter,” she explains.

Larger-scale trials are now needed to assess the long-term impacts of the food on honeybee health, but the supplement could be available to beekeepers and farmers within two years.

The study was led by University of Oxford, working with Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, University of Greenwich, and the Technical University of Denmark.

The research is published in the journal Nature.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

M60 J2 anti-clockwise exit | Anti-Clockwise | Road Works

21 August 2025

Dozens more Afghan relocation data breaches uncovered by BBC | UK News

21 August 2025

Omek Houria Recipe: Make This Bold Tunisian Carrot Dip with Harissa – UK Times

21 August 2025

M1 northbound within J37 | Northbound | Accident

21 August 2025

Adam Scott says losing role to Michael C Hall almost made him quit acting – UK Times

21 August 2025

Sydney Sweeney has sharp rebuttal for critics of her racy side hustles – UK Times

21 August 2025
Top News

M60 J2 anti-clockwise exit | Anti-Clockwise | Road Works

21 August 2025

Dozens more Afghan relocation data breaches uncovered by BBC | UK News

21 August 2025

Omek Houria Recipe: Make This Bold Tunisian Carrot Dip with Harissa – UK Times

21 August 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version