Stingless bees in Peru become the first insects with legal rights. Will it happen globally?
Two municipalities in the Peruvian Amazon have granted native stingless bees the legal right to exist, thrive and be represented in court. This is the first time any insect has been recognized as a rights-bearing entity anywhere in the world, according to a correspondence published in Nature. The ordinances passed in the municipalities of Satipo and Nauta-Loreto guarantee the bees’ right to exist, reproduce and flourish. This establishes a legal framework allowing Indigenous groups and conservationists to sue on behalf of the bees. The campaign was led by Rosa Vásquez Espinoza, founder of Amazon Research Internacional. She spent years traveling into the Amazon to document the bees in collaboration with Indigenous communities. Indigenous peoples have cultivated stingless bees since pre-Columbian times, and they have cultural and spiritual meaning for Indigenous groups such as Asháninka and Kukama-Kukamiria peoples. “Within the stingless bee lives Indigenous traditional knowledge, passed down since the time of our grandparents,” Apu Cesar Ramos, president of EcoAshaninka of the Ashaninka Communal Reserve told The Guardian. “The stingless bee has existed since time immemorial and reflects our coexistence with the rainforest.” The Nature authors noted that stingless bees pollinate roughly 80% of tropical flora. However, they face climate change, deforestation, pesticides and competition from invasive European honeybees. Peru’s national Law No. 32235, passed in 2025, formally recognized stingless bees as a species of national interest. This milestone helped pave the way for the municipal ordinances. “This ordinance marks a turning point in our relationship with nature: it makes stingless bees visible,…This article was originally published on Mongabay
Related Articles
-
Eagles must move forward, Osimhen on Mundial miss
-
What the SpaceX IPO reveals about Gulf money in AI
-
Caleb Yirenkyi aparece al 95' y le da el triunfo a Ghana frente a Panamá
-
Raul Castro backs sweeping Cuba reforms to revive struggling economy
-
Last chance: Amex Platinum's Saks Fifth Avenue statement credit ends on June 30
-
South Australia premier says youth social media ban is working, 6 months later
- Latest Articles
-
- Alexandria Signs With Warner Music Australia, Warner Records: Exclusive
- From The Sports Desk: Four World Cup games, four tightly contested draws Monday
- View / Anthropic takes the path of most resistance
- Europe explores energy security alternatives after Iran war’s turmoil
- Reality Series Survivor Is Spawning an Animated Movie Featuring Animal Contestants
- Interest rates expected to be held by Bank of England
- From The Sports Desk: Four World Cup games, four tightly contested draws Monday
- Raul Castro backs sweeping Cuba reforms to revive struggling economy
- Israeli police rip pants off ultra-Orthodox Jews (VIDEO)
- DHS moves all detainees out of ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ amid hurricane concerns
- Random Reads
-
- Chile Growth Forecast Cut Again as Copper and Fuel Squeeze Bite
- READ: Trump indictment related to hush money payment
- Greta Thunberg joins Brussels protest against Israel
- Read: US officials release 14-point initial agreement to end war with Iran
- Microsoft Confirms RoguePlanet Defender Zero-Day, Says Patch is in Development
- Israeli police rip pants off ultra-Orthodox Jews (VIDEO)
- L.A. Council agrees to put noncitizen voting, police oversight measures on Nov. 3 ballot
- What the SpaceX IPO reveals about Gulf money in AI
- Why Trump is sabotaging his own nominee
- What do Iran and the US stand to gain from their deal? Here’s what to know
- Breaking down the powers of a grand jury as DOJ allegedly investigates Gavin Newsom
- Israeli police rip pants off ultra-Orthodox Jews (VIDEO)
- FDA Clears First Over-the-Counter Continuous Glucose Monitor for Kids
- Caleb Yirenkyi aparece al 95' y le da el triunfo a Ghana frente a Panamá
- Spotify’s post-English AI future
- Netanyahu under pressure in Israel after US-Iran agreement
- Rising insecurity casts shadow over 2027 elections
- ChatGPT can be made to generate sexualised and violent images, researchers find
- Top House Democrats demand immediate Rubio briefing on U.S.-Iran deal
- Germany: Reports of antisemitism in 2025 remain high
- Search
-
- Links
-
- AI is hurting Apple in more ways than one: it may force iPhone price increases
- How to turn off AI in your Google Docs
- The White House Wants Anthropic to Block All Jailbreaks. That May Not Be Possible
- US-Iran memorandum sets Hormuz reopening, $300 billion reconstruction and sanctions relief
- Parafin lands a Goldman Sachs credit facility to embed lending inside Amazon, DoorDash, and Walmart
- EU’s ‘Voldemort’ problem: talking about China without mentioning China
- Entrepreneurs in Nairobi make the case for going solar
- The Download: the first brain implant power user and South Korea’s AI obsession
- Two-thirds of Americans think AI is advancing too quickly
- EU eyes more migrant-busting support to north Africa regimes