We are all learning and I have found that this is a really good forum for getting sound information.Thank you, for some reason I'd started thinking both foulbroods were spore formers. I appreciate the correction.
We are all learning and I have found that this is a really good forum for getting sound information.Thank you, for some reason I'd started thinking both foulbroods were spore formers. I appreciate the correction.
they don't do BDI, only the BBKA do, but you won't get to join the BFA with just a handful of hives. If you don't want the Local BKA nonsense, you can always just join the BBKA as an individual member and pay the BDI that wayDoes the Bee Farmers group have insurance if you intend to run my few collonies as part of my land based business.
See post above from @Prof, EFB does not form spores.So to the wise ones i ask.
Are efb bacteria spores similar to mould or mushroom spores. Do they travel and spread the similar way. How long and how much spores are given off.
How tough are they.
Thank for that. Will consider it.they don't do BDI, only the BBKA do, but you won't get to join the BFA with just a handful of hives. If you don't want the Local BKA nonsense, you can always just join the BBKA as an individual member and pay the BDI that way
One AFB bacterium produces one spore and may be between 10 million and 1000 million per ml of liquid (you will not have a ml in each cell of your comb but it adds up when you allow for all the frames). Chemically very different from fungal/nosema spores etc. and very tough to destroy.Thank for that. Will consider it.
Good descriptionWell, I didn't know what a bacterial spore really was, so I googled it. This video puts it quite simply and well
Bacterial Spore Formation Animation Video - YouTube
Good description
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