- Joined
- Jan 13, 2015
- Messages
- 7,639
- Reaction score
- 669
- Location
- Bedfordshire, England
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- Quite a few
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You're right. In the UK, the density of non-VSH drones would be so high that the trait would be diluted generation after generation. However, if you could restrict the drones (or, more precisely, the drone-producing queens) to those expressing high-VSH, as they do at isolated mating stations. it would be ok to use open mating. People who talk about "drone flooding" are really just talking about increasing the concentration of a particular trait in the environment and making it more likely that a virgin queen will mate with drones from a queen that expresses that trait. It's always the queens you need to select.
You see ... I'm a bloke with 7 hives in my garden with bees that are managing and thriving without being treated fo varroa ... I dont buy in VSH bees ... my colonies are headed by either home reared queens or are ones I've bought from UK Queen rearers or their descendants. I've never claimed any VSH qualities in my bees as I am convinced that at least some of the success I've had remaining treatment free has been about environmental and vocational influence... and the way they are kept. I've not lost many colonies over the years and the few I have lost have been otherwise explained. I would agree that people who make claims about VSH bees really need evidence to corroborate.. I know that B+ has masses of evidence to support VSH ... but I doubt these qualities could be maintained long term with open mated progeny in other areas where the drone pool is more varied and frankly suspect. So ... we need to look for factors that inhibit varroa and assist the bees in their endeavours to live with the pest...
You're right. In the UK, the density of non-VSH drones would be so high that the trait would be diluted generation after generation. However, if you could restrict the drones (or, more precisely, the drone-producing queens) to those expressing high-VSH, as they do at isolated mating stations. it would be ok to use open mating. People who talk about "drone flooding" are really just talking about increasing the concentration of a particular trait in the environment and making it more likely that a virgin queen will mate with drones from a queen that expresses that trait. It's always the queens you need to select.