- Joined
- Jun 14, 2023
- Messages
- 408
- Reaction score
- 455
- Location
- Surrey, England
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 14
Watched this talk by Steve Riley, from Westerham Beekeepers and member of the “Path to Varroa-resistance in the UK” team, led by Emeritus Professor Stephen Martin.
He provides a concise update on the latest research on varroa resistance behaviour in honey bees.
I recommend a watch.
For me, the biggest takeaway was an increasing opinion that the way forward for varroa control is behavioural selection, not miticides.
An added bonus is that varroa resistant bees are also more resistant to diseases like CPBV and Deformed wing virus.
By using miticides to treat varroa we are breeding weak bees, reliant on our miticide treatments.
The challenge for us beekeepers will be the disruption. We're talking about a combination of brutal natural selection and careful selective queen breeding - fewer sublimation gadgets and more beekeeping (skills).
Unlike the US, there's no significant commercial supplier of varroa resistant queens in the UK - a business opportunity for someone.
How do you all feel about this?
He provides a concise update on the latest research on varroa resistance behaviour in honey bees.
I recommend a watch.
For me, the biggest takeaway was an increasing opinion that the way forward for varroa control is behavioural selection, not miticides.
An added bonus is that varroa resistant bees are also more resistant to diseases like CPBV and Deformed wing virus.
By using miticides to treat varroa we are breeding weak bees, reliant on our miticide treatments.
The challenge for us beekeepers will be the disruption. We're talking about a combination of brutal natural selection and careful selective queen breeding - fewer sublimation gadgets and more beekeeping (skills).
Unlike the US, there's no significant commercial supplier of varroa resistant queens in the UK - a business opportunity for someone.
How do you all feel about this?
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