African Honeyguides

Research on a remarkable
human-animal relationship

Economic value of human-honeyguide mutualism in Niassa Special Reserve

Feb 2, 2025

Economic value of human-honeyguide mutualism

Economic value of human-honeyguide mutualism (Figure from van der Wal et al., 2025)

Our new study quantifies what honeyguides contribute to honey-hunters in the Reserva Especial do Niassa in northern Moçambique. In collaboration with Celestino Dauda, Horácio Murico, Colleen Begg, Keith Begg and Agostinho Jorge of the Niassa Carnivore Project, we found that honey-hunters sell an average of 37 litres of honey annually, and 75% of wild honey is harvested with the help honeyguides. The total economic value of honeyguides to the local economy was ~$40,700 in 2023. We discuss that protecting miombo woodlands is essential to preserve this unique human-bird partnership and its cultural and social value.

The image is Figure 1 from the paper, showing an overview of the mutual benefits that humans and greater honeyguides gain from cooperating with one another, with an important one being the income generated from selling honey. In REN all these benefits are only possible when people and honeyguides are able to interact in healthy miombo woodlands.

The paper was covered by several news outlets, including Mongabay, Club of Mozambique and Kambaku.

Please see: “The economic value of human-honeyguide mutualism in Reserva Especial do Niassa, Moçambique” by Jessica van der Wal, Celestino Dauda, David Lloyd-Jones, Horácio Murico, Colleen Begg, Keith Begg, Agostinho Jorge and Claire Spottiswoode, published in the journal Ecosystem Services on 2 February 2025.

 

News

Tragic attacks in the Niassa Special Reserve, Mozambique

On 29 April 2025, armed insurgents attacked the Mariri Environmental Centre in Mozambique’s Niassa Special Reserve, resulting in the tragic loss of two anti-poaching scouts, Domingos Daude and Fernando Paolo Wirsone (please see statement from the Niassa Carnivore Project). This followed a prior tragic attack at Kambako Safari camp on 19 April. Mariri and the nearby village of Mbamba are at the heart of our work on human-honeyguide cooperation, made possible by the knowledge and partnership of the Mbamba honey-hunting community. We grieve alongside the people of Mariri, Mbamba, and the wider Niassa community, and stand in solidarity with the enduring spirit of conservation and unity.

read more

New paper on honeyguides guiding to snakes (and a mammal) rather than to bees

In a new study from the Honeyguide Research Project, we are excited to present evidence that honeyguides occasionally guide humans to non-bee animals. Our research – which builds on centuries of reports by a wide variety of human cultures across Africa – shows how the behaviour of honeyguides when guiding humans to wild bees’ nests, is spatially and acoustically similar to when honeyguides guide humans to other kinds of animal. In Niassa Special Reserve, where this research was conducted, we find this to be a rare behaviour (occurring on around 1% of honey-hunting interactions). We suggest that the most likely explanation for such behaviour is not as punishment for not previously rewarding the birds with beeswax, nor as a form of altruistic warning behaviour, but rather, due to cognitive mistakes in the birds’ spatial recall.

read more

Lailat and Jessica on fieldwork at Niassa

Lailat Guta and Jessica van der Wal returned to the Niassa Special Reserve, to visit our long-term collaborators in the Mbamba honey-hunting community and at Mariri Environmental Centre. As part of Lailat’s MSc research on the relationship between honey-hunting and the broader ecosystem, Lailat and Jessica are conducting interviews with honey-hunters and other knowledgeable individuals to document the economic and cultural values of trees and crops, and their dependence on bees.

read more