梨花白如雪, 蜂鸣已是春
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金é¸é¦™æ¶ˆæ¬²æ–é‚,梨花春雨掩é‡é—¨ã€‚
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它的花è¯æ²¡æœ‰æ‰“开时是漂亮的粉色的。
当香收æŸå¶ï¼Œå…»èœœè¿‘梨花。
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柳色黄金嫩,梨花白雪香。
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这个蜜蜂是ä¸æ˜¯çœ‹èµ·æ¥ä¸ä¸€æ ·ï¼Ÿ 她是东方蜜蜂Apis cerana. ä¸å›½éƒ½å«å®ƒä¸èœ‚(ä¸åŽèœœèœ‚)
徒教柳å¶é•¿ï¼Œæ¼«ä½¿æ¢¨èŠ±å¼€ã€‚
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这个就ä¸æ˜¯èœœèœ‚了, 虽然很多人分ä¸æ¸…。 是食蚜è‡çš„一ç§ã€‚ å®ƒæ¨¡æ‹Ÿèœ‚çš„æ ·å,让它的天敌以为它也å¯ä»¥è›°å¯¹æ–¹ã€‚这个估计是模拟一ç§ç†Šèœ‚。
å›æž—新到日,春酒酌梨花
–èµµå˜ã€é€å‹äººéƒ‘å·žå½’è§ã€‘。
这个å‡å°èœœå°±æ›´åƒèœœèœ‚了。
With an annual output of 26 million tons of pears worldwide, China accounts for 18 million tons. Argentina, the United States, and Italy each have about 750,000 tons. There are also many varieties of Chinese pears.
The pear flower’s bee dependence index is 50%, which means that without pollination by bees, it can also produce 50%. Whereas large almonds and blueberries are 100%, apples and cherries are 90%. The output value of pears in Michigan is only 1.2 million US dollars (2015 data), which only accounts for one thousandth of the total value of Michigan ’s agricultural products that rely on bees each year (nearly one billion US dollars). I haven’t seen blooming pear orchards in Michigan, and I guess they will pollinate bees.
The caption and other photos were taken at the Pear Garden of Jiangxi Agricultural University (2012.4.1, thanks to Professor Zeng Zhi, the director of the Bee Research Institute of Jiangxi Agricultural University for being accompanied!), Next to the Tao Garden (yesterday’s Peach Blossom was taken on the same day). The next two inscriptions are the peas ( Pyrus calleryana ) behind my house on March 28, 2012. The American name is Flowering Pear, which is originally from China. The fruit is only as big as soybeans, but as beautiful as pear blossoms. It is a pity that the smell of flowers is rather stinky, and many people don’t like it. I guess I can graft pear branches on it. The flowers of the pears that I eat also seem to have any smell. The bees are not very fond of it. The bees on that day were obviously less than the peach flowers. Maybe pear flower can spray some queen queen hormones to stimulate bee collection, or remove some of the tastes that bees don’t like when breeding.
Ancient Chinese scholars wrote no less than pear blossom poems, maybe more? But more than 60% are sad. I struggled to find some positive photos to match the bee photos (except photos of rainy pear blossoms).
Although the pear tree is also Rosaceae, it is not a genus with most other fruits. It is Pyrus, with more than 30 different species worldwide and more varieties.