DNA analysis uncovers honey origins and fraud

Scientists are using DNA testing to identify the plant sources of honey, detect adulteration, and reveal hive pathogens. This method helps distinguish pure local honey from imported or syrup-contaminated products. Advances in genetic sequencing are making these detections more accurate and accessible.

Jay Evans, from the USDA Beltsville Bee Lab, explores how DNA fingerprints in honey provide insights beyond just plant origins. These traces can identify bee races, pathogens, parasites, and even traces from hive visitors or harvesters. Combined with chemical tests for pesticides and additives, DNA analysis is strengthening efforts against honey fraud.

At the 2026 American Beekeeping Federation meeting, German beekeeper Bernhard Heuvel presented on detecting fraud using European scientific collaborations. His work highlights an ongoing arms race between fraudsters and investigators, where chemical methods are increasingly evaded, but DNA offers a more robust approach.

Traditional pollen identification via microscopy has limitations, but DNA barcoding targets specific plant genes for precise sourcing. A 2025 UK study by Sophie Dodd and colleagues used this to detect corn and rice syrup adulteration at 1% levels in honey. Rice DNA, absent from UK flora, clearly indicated blending with foreign syrups.

Shotgun DNA sequencing examines all genetic material in honey, overcoming biases in single-gene tests. A 2018 Italian study by Samuele Bovo and team confirmed labeled plant sources and identified bee pathogens like viruses and waxmoths. More recently, Priit Paluoja and colleagues analyzed nearly 400 Estonian honeys in 2025, verifying plant diversity for geographic tracing and detecting American foulbrood bacteria, especially in diseased colonies. The method showed no small hive beetle in Estonian samples but traces in US honeys, aiding monitoring of invasive pests.

As sequencing costs drop and computational tools improve, these techniques promise better protection for authentic honey and deeper understanding of bee health.

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Domestic honey bee colonies in the United States suffered losses averaging over 60% in 2025, marking the largest winter die-off since Colony Collapse Disorder was identified in 2006. This decline highlights ongoing challenges from parasites, poor nutrition, and habitat loss. Experts from the Honey Bee Health Coalition emphasize the need for better support to sustain pollination services worth $18 billion annually.

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Researchers at the State University of Campinas in Brazil have created a novel product by blending native bee honey with cocoa bean shells, extracting beneficial compounds without synthetic solvents. The ultrasound-assisted process yields a chocolate-flavored honey rich in antioxidants and stimulants like theobromine and caffeine. This sustainable innovation could enhance gourmet foods and cosmetics.

Researchers have sequenced the full genome of a woolly rhinoceros from a 14,400-year-old wolf puppy's stomach contents, offering insights into the species' final days before extinction. The discovery reveals a genetically healthy population on the brink of disappearance. This breakthrough marks the first time such a genome has been extracted from one animal's digestive remains.

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Tiny moss plants, often overlooked, are proving valuable in criminal investigations by revealing precise locations of crimes. A new study reviews 150 years of cases where bryophytes like moss provided key evidence, including a 2011 case in Michigan that located a buried child. Researchers urge law enforcement to consider these small plants as silent witnesses.

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Preliminary genetic analyses indicate that the African swine fever virus killing 29 wild boars in Barcelona did not originate from the nearby Generalitat laboratory. Scientists compared the DNA and found mutations suggesting years of separate evolution. However, the results are not conclusive, with further tests pending.

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