No mention of treatment or varroa whatsoever from me ,you missed that bit.
I imagine you are responding to my post here?
Feral bees and bait hives
My problem with your master plan is that you magnify the aggression and brood disorder that our local feral bees are lumped with.
I'm sorry that doesn't scan for me. By 'lumped with' do you mean 'saddled with' or 'lumbered with' or something like that?
If so: That's not my experience. Nor is is consistent with evolutionary understanding. Aggressiveness has a cost; over-aggressiveness in any particular environments makes a colony uncompetitive. It 'breeds' out through natural selection. It's likely true that you are more likely to get stroppier bees from collecting swarms than buying purposely bred gentle stock. But I've never found it to be a problem. You just get better at handling your stock, and you keep the spikier ones away from the public. The advantage over buying in gentler queens is that you are not interfering with the natural development of resistance in your local population.
Its very likely that where feral bees are struggling with the mess of multiple strains and broad lack of resistance - ie anywhere near where treating beekeepers are common - you will get a wide range of mongrel behaviours. But outside, or once they have sufficient numbers, or are have developed discretionary mating habits that keep them separate, a thriving local population settles down to a good measure of calm uniformity, as that state is most productive - ie competitive.
Too many bees.Too many poor quality bees.
Says you/whatever. The fact is bees live wild in most places in the UK now, and as they are free, if you are on a budget, or you can understand the ecological case and you want to work within it, you might want to bait bait hives out. This thread is for people who are interested in doing those things.
It's an established fact that the UK is one of the most nature depleted areas in the world
Nonsense. Is it more depleted than any desert in the world? Many places in the uk are doing pretty well.
Insects form one of the foundation layers of the eco system
We agree
We have had ,its said ,an 80%reduction in the insect population over the last 30 years,but a massive spike in honeybees(due to humans)
I don't think so. There were far more hives during and after the WW2, and before that rural communities had many beekeepers.
9 of 13 species of UK bumble bees remain (and they're the cute ones that get the PR-the ugly bugs are all gone and forgotten)
It's like a zoo releasing diseased animals so they 'get better'
"I'm sure you can work that out for yourself"
Any such 'diseased animals' are escapees from your hives. You might want to think about that. They have been rendered not fit for purpose in the natural environment.
If you had even a basic comprehension of natural selection, you would understand how the machinery is, more than anything else, a health-seeking device.
The sickest die, the strongest make the next generation and imbue it with the qualities that made them strong.
After many years of working with feral-sourced bees your picture of them being weak, aggressive and disease-ridden make no sense at to me. I think you should try experimenting with them. You might just get a nice surprise.