TooBee...
Field Bee
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2017
- Messages
- 583
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- Ireland
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 2+ nucs
I've heard that Dr Jonathan Ellis from the University of Plymouth has done a lot of comparative analyses (on A. m. mellifera here) the conclusion being that the CORNISH A. m. mellifera are not closely related to any other A. m. mellifera and in fact are spatially distant genetically from each other ( Three distinct groups)... so far unpublished work.
Does anyone have access to this work,
1. that shows the Cornish A. m. mellifera is not related to other A. m. mellifera (is a separate Subspecie being suggested?)
2. and actually splits into THREE distinct groups (are Forms being suggested?)
Yes, I could just contact the guy, but it's unpublished, so I'm doubting I'll get it!
I'm guessing that this is the same person,
https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/staff/jon-ellis
and from looking at his publications, he has one work on A. m. mellifera,
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10841-018-0067-7
The conclusion of which is that "Genetic diversity is relatively high in comparison with other European populations" which is kinda strange as my understanding is that the B4 Project (which funded the research) would seek to reduce genetic diversity, which we know from other research weakens a colony - but as I don't have access to the entire paper I could be wrong.
Does anyone have access to this work,
1. that shows the Cornish A. m. mellifera is not related to other A. m. mellifera (is a separate Subspecie being suggested?)
2. and actually splits into THREE distinct groups (are Forms being suggested?)
Yes, I could just contact the guy, but it's unpublished, so I'm doubting I'll get it!
I'm guessing that this is the same person,
https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/staff/jon-ellis
and from looking at his publications, he has one work on A. m. mellifera,
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10841-018-0067-7
The conclusion of which is that "Genetic diversity is relatively high in comparison with other European populations" which is kinda strange as my understanding is that the B4 Project (which funded the research) would seek to reduce genetic diversity, which we know from other research weakens a colony - but as I don't have access to the entire paper I could be wrong.