Hivemaker.
Queen Bee
A focus should be made on virus contaminated imported honey and even prion research...
Which viruses in honey? And why only imported honey,why not all food/honey, imported or not.
A focus should be made on virus contaminated imported honey and even prion research...
Hi, can anyone shed any light on the following comment received in an email?
"John has lost 4 colonies and he told me he had the bee inspector out and he though it was a parasite left behind after the varroa mite falls off? ... "
This is a wonderful thread. No one knows what the question is but no shortage of suggestions.
So here's my 5 pennyworth...
Varroa remains the number one cause of bee deaths in the UK. Nationally, winter losses are running at about 20% which is much higher than in pre-varroa days where IIRC it was around 5%. Although of course other diseases and starvation will claim some colonies in the winter the majority seem to to succumb to viruses spread by varroa.
Can we know how many colonies John had going into winter? (Losing 4/4 ain't the same as 4/100.)
And what his colonies' history of Varroa treatment might be?
Perhaps, for his own clarification, John should re-contact his inspector (maybe by email) for clarification as to exactly what was said.
And then circulate the reply.
The varroa mite I presume was brought in from overseas with living bees... unless bees made it the 22 miles from Calais under their own steam?
[/CENTER]
No doubt it arrived on bees,and i expect small hive beetle will arrive in a pot plant or some imported fruit or veg,so should we also ban that,maybe they could be in some mud stuck to somones boots/shoes,should we ban people from travelling around the world. The virus to do with the problem with sheep/lambs was blown in on the wind with midges.
They will not allow bees but only bee semen into the country.
I read an interesting post on Gavins SBF about this,how Daykel apairies imported carnica drone semen into NZ to turn the Italian queens into NZ Carni's,and a link to the NZ forum,where some were not amused. Been easier to just smuggle in a few breeder queens
Varroa feed on the haemolymph of the larvae, since that is where bees store a lot of their protein.
Parasitised winter bees, short on protein, will have their lifespan reduced significantly by varroa and may well die before the spring build up.
Winter Oxalic treatment is all very well. But if you get a large varroa drop in December it means the little sods have been feasting on your winter bees when they were larvae in September and October
https://secure.fera.defra.gov.uk/beebase/index.cfm?pageid=93
So, you are likely to get your bees dying prematurely in March. And it might explain what the Bee Inspector was trying to tell him.
Sorry to be a Jobs comforter
This is a wonderful thread. No one knows what the question is but no shortage of suggestions.
It was 4 out of 4 and that is as much as I know. I was copied in on the email for my comments from someone else. Unfortunately I don't even know John. ...