- Joined
- Jan 13, 2015
- Messages
- 7,639
- Reaction score
- 669
- Location
- Bedfordshire, England
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- Quite a few
Breeder queens
I know this is going off at a tangent from the original discussion, but, I find the term "breeder queen" a bit misleading. It implies that you can buy in a good quality queen and start a whole line from that single queen. This is not the case.
I test a number of island-mated sister queens each year and select those that express the traits I am looking for for further breeding. You can't rely on someone else to select a queen for you. It just doesn't work that way, at least, not in my experience. There is variability even between a group of sister queens mated to the same group of drones. How much more variability do you think there will be if the drones which mate with the virgin queens come from several different mothers?
One of the problems I have with the higher level theories that get published is: they are statistical models. One of the basic assumptions in statistics is that you can take any sample at random and that it is representative of the population....but...how representative is it if there is variability even within a group of sisters mated to the same group of drones?
not bad if it's a breeder queen.
I know this is going off at a tangent from the original discussion, but, I find the term "breeder queen" a bit misleading. It implies that you can buy in a good quality queen and start a whole line from that single queen. This is not the case.
I test a number of island-mated sister queens each year and select those that express the traits I am looking for for further breeding. You can't rely on someone else to select a queen for you. It just doesn't work that way, at least, not in my experience. There is variability even between a group of sister queens mated to the same group of drones. How much more variability do you think there will be if the drones which mate with the virgin queens come from several different mothers?
One of the problems I have with the higher level theories that get published is: they are statistical models. One of the basic assumptions in statistics is that you can take any sample at random and that it is representative of the population....but...how representative is it if there is variability even within a group of sisters mated to the same group of drones?
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