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Adopt a hive · Tree-nesting species · Ronsapilla

Meet the Ronsapilla · Melipona eburnea

The forest’s great honey producer.

Photo · ARI Field Team
About this species

About the Ronsapilla

Strong, generous, and always busy, the Ronsapilla is the forest’s great producer. Very similar to the common honeybee (Apis mellifera) in shape and behaviour, but completely without a sting — it transforms flowers into medicinal honey prized by the Kukama for its antibacterial properties.

In the wild, Ronsapilla colonies nest deep inside hollow trees. Protecting one colony means protecting the tree, the surrounding understory, and the pollination network that depends on it.

Ronsapilla
Photo · ARI Field Team
How your donation helps

Every contribution funds real work.

  • Regular checks of the colony in its natural tree cavity

  • Materials for tree planting, bee sanctuaries and community workshops on sustainable meliponiculture

  • Funding for replanting the species of trees Ronsapilla prefers

  • Documentation of the colony’s annual cycle for science partners

As a supporter

What you receive in return

Every hive you adopt is home to 2,000–4,000 stingless bees. Here's what comes back to you in return:

01

A plaque with your name

Recognized at the stingless bee sanctuary where your hive lives — physical proof that this colony is sustained by you.

02

Annual reports

A yearly update on how your colony is doing — surviving, growing, producing.

03

Photos and videos

Periodic field updates from the tree, hive, or rational box you support.

04

Knowing you're protecting bees

The lasting satisfaction of safeguarding a keystone species of Amazonian forests.

05

The community's story

A profile of the Indigenous community stewarding your hive, in their own voice.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What every donor wants to know before adopting a Ronsapilla colony.

Q · 01

What does "adopt" actually mean?

It is a symbolic adoption: your contribution funds the protection of the bees, their habitat, and the Indigenous family that cares for them. You do not gain legal ownership of the colony — the impact is conservation, not possession.

Q · 02

Where is the hive located?

Inside the buffer zone of the Pacaya Samiria National Reserve, near the San Francisco community in Nauta district, Loreto Region, Peru. The hive sits in a native tree maintained by the host family.

Q · 03

Who cares for the hive?

Indigenous Kukama Kukamiria families trained in sustainable meliponiculture. Their work combines ancestral knowledge with modern monitoring techniques.

Q · 04

What do I receive?

A digital adoption certificate, an introduction to the host community, biological information about the species and the tree where it nests, and monthly photo/video updates.

Q · 05

Can I gift the adoption?

Yes. At checkout you can personalize the certificate for the recipient’s name of your choice.