At the time Brazil ranked 47th among the world's
honey-producing countries With the arrival of the new variety, that
country's ranking quickly rose to seventh, and much of the honey we eat
in this country now comes from Brazil.
Kerr lost favor in 1964, when he protested publicly
against the then-military government's excesses, and he spent time in
jail for exercising his conscience. In 1969 he was again arrested, this
time for protesting an incident in which Brazilian soldiers raped and
tortured a nun and went unpunished for their crime.
The Brazilian government was not pleased by Kerr's
protests. To cast doubt on his credentials as a scientist, it portrayed
him in court as a kind of Frankenstein doctor bent on mayhem and the
eventual destruction of his adopted country.
The lurid newspaper stories that followed touched off a
panic, proclaiming that Kerr had been training his imported Africans to
be 'killer bees,' attacking humans on command.
Thanks to the diligence of the military police, the
government went on to trumpet, this foreign madman was stopped before
he could put his evil drones to work.
Thus the myth of the killer bee was born.
African bees are no more venomous than their European
cousins. Neither do they go out of their way to look for targets, human
or otherwise.
The difference lies in the African bees' defensiveness;
resistant to most pests, they have natural enemies only in predators,
and, survival of the fittest being what it is, the African bees have
long since evolved to resist predation with extreme prejudice.
When their colonies are attacked or approached, they tend to swarm and sting with abandon.
Since their arrival in the Americas, the African
purebreds have intermingled with European varieties of honeybee, giving
birth to a hybrid, the 'Africanized bee.' It is these small, graceful
creatures that have been crossing our border into the American
Southwest of late, and giving so many people fits.
To call them 'killer bees' is clearly wrong; the once
more common German bee is more aggressive. And because Western culture
tends to equate anything African with savagery, 'Africanized bees'
isn't much help.
In Latin America the creatures are called abejas bravas,
'brave bees,' a name unlikely to catch on with any but the savviest
gringos.
Thanks to a successful lobbying effort by the Brazilian government, the formerly common name 'Brazilian bees' has been quashed.
Africanized bees, then, is what we'll have to make do with--with no connotations, positive or negative.
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