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SF0253089
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...

SF0253088
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...

SF0253087
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...

SF0253086
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...
Lowland meadows, on the other hand, are natural and rich in dozens of different grasses, as many as a hundred in the high mountains.
They still need human labor: they must be tended, mowed or grazed. But their best protectors are the four-legged animals: cattle, sheep, goats and insects: bees, butterflies, wasps, ladybugs...

SF0240982
The Piemonte da Diamantina area, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, is dominated by the caatinga, literally “gray forest” in the indigenous Tupi-Guaraní language, an ecosystem found only in the country’s semi-arid region.
This ecosystem is home to the Melipona quadrifasciata anthidioides bee which is much larger than other bees from the same family, and can survive very hot temperatures.
Around 10 to 11 millimeters long, the stingless andaçaia bee (also known as amanaçaí, amanaçaia, manaçaia and mandaçaia-grande) has a black head and thorax, rust-colored wings and an abdomen with yellow stripes that are wider than those on other species.
The Piemonte da Diamantina area, in the Brazilian state of Bahia, is dominated by the caatinga, literally “gray forest” in the indigenous Tupi-Guaraní language, an ecosystem found only in the country’s semi-arid region.
This ecosystem is home to the Melipona quadrifasciata anthidioides bee which is much larger than other bees from the same family, and can survive very hot temperatures.
Around 10 to 11 millimeters long, the stingless andaçaia bee (also known as amanaçaí, amanaçaia, manaçaia and mandaçaia-grande) has a black head and thorax, rust-colored wings and an abdomen with yellow stripes that are wider than those on other species.

SF0015991
A couple of hours westward from Addis Ababa, the road climbs between pastures and cereal plots and suddenly overlooks the magnificent Wenchi crater: a ring of steep, verdant slopes that frame a deep blue lake. Honey is produced in traditional hives: large cylinders of woven bamboo, covered with false banana leaves, and then closed at one end with straw, and at the other with a circular wooden board, which has two side openings for the bees to enter. The honey extraction occurs only once, in December, from the flowers of Erica arborea.
A couple of hours westward from Addis Ababa, the road climbs between pastures and cereal plots and suddenly overlooks the magnificent Wenchi crater: a ring of steep, verdant slopes that frame a deep blue lake. Honey is produced in traditional hives: large cylinders of woven bamboo, covered with false banana leaves, and then closed at one end with straw, and at the other with a circular wooden board, which has two side openings for the bees to enter. The honey extraction occurs only once, in December, from the flowers of Erica arborea.