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Really good information and has changed the way we view varroa.
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I thought I’d sticky this here
It’s really good information and has changed the way we view varroa.
I thought I’d sticky this here
It’s really good information and has changed the way we view varroa.
Hey, this is beekeeping - it will be another 100 years before anyone cottons on!So do we stop calling them phoretic.
Always the optimist !Hey, this is beekeeping - it will be another 100 years before anyone cottons on!
Thank you Dani for bringing this to our attention. Actually I want to say, "to my attention". When I first saw that the duration of this video was going to be nearly one and a quarter hours, I thought about the other things I wanted to get done today. However, as I watched I became more and more aware that this was a very significant presentation, and I found that I was trying to absorb every bit of information that was being presented.It’s really good information and has changed the way we view varroa.
The real difficulty is to find ways to encourage beekeepers to take the problem seriously. The greatest difficulty will be in getting EVERY beekeeper to take the problem seriously. Even if most beekeepers take the problem seriously, it only takes a few non-conformers to enable there to be reservoirs of varroa infection.Hey, this is beekeeping - it will be another 100 years before anyone cottons on!
I'm glad you found it interesting. It is indeed a very important discoveryThank you Dani for bringing this to our attention.
From the various comments on the forum, it appears that oxalic acid vaporisation provides a method of killing varroa mites in a hive, but it does not address the problem of varroa mites which are parasitising bee larvae.
I find your comment interesting, because it seems that you are confident in making this claim. I do not have experience with varroa (nor do I want to) and I do not want to disagree with you. There have been plenty of comments within the discussion threads of this forum which indicate that varroa "treatments" are only of immediate benefit to bees, and not to larvae which have yet to emerge as fully formed bees. It is for this reason that I would ask you to explain why you believe that "Sublimating oxalic does actually address the problem of varroa in the brood."Sublimating oxalic does actually address the problem of varroa in the brood.
If you address a high load of varroa on the bees then there is little to infest the next round.I find your comment interesting, because it seems that you are confident in making this claim. I do not have experience with varroa (nor do I want to) and I do not want to disagree with you. There have been plenty of comments within the discussion threads of this forum which indicate that varroa "treatments" are only of immediate benefit to bees, and not to larvae which have yet to emerge as fully formed bees. It is for this reason that I would ask you to explain why you believe that "Sublimating oxalic does actually address the problem of varroa in the brood."
I have not seen any explanation of the actual mechanism or process by which vaporised oxalic acid kills varroa mites. I would appreciate any advice from whoever may be able to give definitive information on this subject.
Thinking about the Youtube video of Dr Samuel Ramsay, it seems fairly clear that the most easily observed varroa mites in a hive are the ones which are riding on the thorax of bees. These varroa are seeking to hitch-hike a ride onto another bee, because the bee that they have been feeding on (and which they are trying to leave) is already one of the "walking dead"! By the time a varroa mite leaves a bee, it seems (based on Dr Ramsay's presentation) that the bee is doomed to die because its "fat body" has been eaten out.
I think that one of the most sinister aspects of the varroa mite's feeding attack on a bee is that it embeds itself so deeply into the the bee's abdominal tissue. The mite not only embeds itself, but digs its claws into the bees abdomen so that it will not be easily dislodged. In this situation, much of the mites external surface area would be protected from exposure to oxalic acid vapor. Can you provide information which gives absolute confirmation that such an embedded mite will be killed by oxalic acid vapor?
You made another comment, "If you keep the infection rate low then some varroa in the larvae is of little consequence."
It would seem apparent that varroa are not effectively exterminated by these vapor treatments. The fact that repeated applications of vapor are recommended - even if it is for the purpose of treating bees which have emerged since the previous treatment - would seem to indicate that this is so.
Please do not misunderstand my interest in this subject. I can feel as much empathy with you over varroa infestations as if we had the problem here. I have the very uncomfortable feeling that the varroa problem is so persistent because the treatments which have been discovered, and are being used, are not nearly as complete an answer as we would wish them to be. It is a bit like saying that we are treating the symptoms, rather than the malady.
If we say that "some varroa in the larvae is of little consequence", then we are continually leaving our hives open for re-infection. It is because the problem is real that I would like to encourage the greatest level of cooperation between beekeepers, in being as diligent as possible in using the available treatments, and using them conscientiously, in accordance with the directions for use. In this way greater mitigation of the problem may be achieved while work is undertaken to find a better cure.
And is why we really need to be breeding resistant bees rather than relying on treatment.If you address a high load of varroa on the bees then there is little to infest the next round.
I didn’t say that Oxalic reached the brood.
You cannot eradicate varroa from a colony just lessen the burden
This last sentence is really important.
Some need some are happy with treating.And is why we really need to be breeding resistant bees rather than relying on treatment.
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