Bit odd don’t you think, when you pay a company to do some tests for you isn’t it you the customer that decides what’s confidential….Maybe I’m just old fashionedMaybe the confidentiality clause is still in place ?
Bit odd don’t you think, when you pay a company to do some tests for you isn’t it you the customer that decides what’s confidential….Maybe I’m just old fashioned
a very convenient excuseMaybe the confidentiality clause is still in place ?
You can but there harder to get hold of, very very few in the UK can claim anything other than native type. Largely down to lack of isolated mating sites and pro breeders focusing on other races or strains. Effectively they are mongrel types and the offspring vary so commercial produces don’t get the consistency. There are black bee breeders in Europe who do produce F0 queens and some have been known to import to breed native bees here there was also a supplier in Greece but I think they’ve stopped due to lack of demand. There was 1 gentleman in the UK who I had hopes could produce a decent black bee. However that’s no longer an option, his opinion on the available breeding stock was poor. His thinking on AMM was that there’s a good bee there but little work/selection had been done to find it, unlike other races and strains.I have always wondered why we can't get F0s Amm or native black bees whereas Carnica and buckfast are widely available. Is it purely based on demand or because you can't get true Amms or native bees for controlled selected breeding?
I have always wondered why we can't get F0s Amm or native black bees whereas Carnica and buckfast are widely available. Is it purely based on demand or because you can't get true Amms or native bees for controlled selected breeding?
Who says you can't, a randomly selected bee here in Ireland has a 98% chance of being Amm, from memory the bees on the eastern 3 miles of the Isle of Laeso (it's 12 miles long) give a 99% DNA result; there's research in Poland and in Ireland that concluded that Amm only mate with Amm! But carnica or Buckfast mate with any bee.
If they are available they must be for a selected few. I have mentioned Ireland and John as I know a lot of work is going on down there and most beeks are involved, unlike mainland UK.Who says you can't, a randomly selected bee here in Ireland has a 98% chance of being Amm, from memory the bees on the eastern 3 miles of the Isle of Laeso (it's 12 miles long) give a 99% DNA result; there's research in Poland and in Ireland that concluded that Amm only mate with Amm! But carnica or Buckfast mate with any bee.
Does that mean keeping Carnica/Buckfast in NI has no effect on the indigenous population?Who says you can't, a randomly selected bee here in Ireland has a 98% chance of being Amm, from memory the bees on the eastern 3 miles of the Isle of Laeso (it's 12 miles long) give a 99% DNA result; there's research in Poland and in Ireland that concluded that Amm only mate with Amm! But carnica or Buckfast mate with any bee.
Or there is lots of culling taking place.Does that mean keeping Carnica/Buckfast in NI has no effect on the indigenous population?
I think this is a little exaggeration. I was reading yesterday an article in the March edition of the American Bee Culture that studies of DCA are showing that AMC drones tend to be flying much higher than AML drones. Amc at the top of the column and AML at the bottom. Where Buckfasts come in this I ma unaware and maybe they do mate with anything. There is no mention of where AMM are in the column.But carnica or Buckfast mate with any bee.
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