charlievictorbravo
Drone Bee
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2012
- Messages
- 1,802
- Reaction score
- 79
- Location
- Torpoint, Cornwall
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 2 - 14x12
No they don't, in fact type B can wipe out type A
There is a conflict here that I don't understand - JBM's view above is what Schroeder from the MBA found in Ron Hoskins' bees but Fatbees' refererence ("Using laboratory experiments and a systematic field survey, we demonstrate that an emerging DWV genotype (DWV-B) is more virulent than the established DWV genotype (DWV-A) and is widespread in the landscape.") produces a contradiction.
I find it difficult to believe that a virulent (meaning it is extremely severe or harmful in its effect) Type B DWV as described in Fatbees' reference has not wiped out Ron Hoskins' bees in the 20-odd years he has not been treating his bees with veroicides.
One of the problems is that this sort of work is done by academic virologists who don't know one end of a bee from the other but they understand viruses and how to identify them. Research is needed that combines virology with practical beekeeping.
CVB