Just put my specs on..... Although I have NO experience with Varroa,,, this looks like Braula to me... Heavy infestation though...Looks like a terminal varroa infestation along with a laying worker and a dud queen and starvation. Doesn't get much worse than that - sorry to see it.
I believe you are right! Just shows how you see what you expect to see sometimes.Just put my specs on..... Although I have NO experience with Varroa,,, this looks like Braula to me... Heavy infestation though...
Re Braula - I do stand to correction??
Not BraulaAm I right thinking that bumblebees also have Braula? I seem to remember looking at one mid summer and it was covered with them...
Looks like a terminal varroa infestation along with a laying worker and a dud queen and starvation. Doesn't get much worse than that - sorry to see it.
Kill them more like why OA in a country that doesn't have varroa?I would attempt recovery by spraying with weak and warm syrup before anything else. Amazing how the most weak bees will recover and thrive with care. When they are mobile again give them a frame or two of bias to build upon and throw in a few workers and seal the entrance for 24 hours. Then a dose of oxalic, vaped preferably, and I think you can save them.
Yes, they are the wingless fly, there is only one on the queen..... ( a puff of tobacco smoke will kill the lot I'm sure).Am I right in thinking that there is no varroa in Australia?
Thanks Into the Lions Den. I'd like to save her....I really think she is fine, but needs to be given a chance with more assistants.Colony is in the final days of collapse. Cause uncertain..a few braula will not be the reason. Presence of drones is so small a set of bees is a poor indicator....however it just looks like something we see here in some colonies most years in late spring. Some just drop so low in bee power the go below the point of recovery unaided and can trail on for quite some time slowly petering out. There are often underlying reasons for it that can only be ascertained by closer examination..nosema for example.
Would not give too much attention to the multiple eggs...one poster raised the spectre of laying workers, but in the presence of a queen this would be rare.....more likely the tiny number of bees left cannot keep up with the rate of lay of the queen...which is something we quite often see. Multiple eggs often are present in that scenario. There are a few unhatched cells remaining which are worker...and none of the eggs are up on the side walls. (the few specs on the walls of the cells are just detritus as the colony is too small to housekeep effectively.)
IF...and I would caution against it in many circumstance,.... you wish to save the queen I would make a fresh nuc from a healthy colony and save this queen ONLY and introduce her to the new nuc. The bees may well be carrying a hefty nosema load so do not save the existing unit. Nosema strongly associated with this type of symptom. Your problem may also be the queen herself..she may be a poor performer and the colony did not have enough young bees going into the wintering period and in that case the pattern may well repeat a year on and you could have had a colony with something better in it by then.
Often..if the problem IS the queen...and you save her, the unit you place her in will attempt supercedure once the pressure to lay hard comes on and they find she is not up to it.
Far from exhaustive however...there are numerous other possibilities.
Not sure if all reading the thread are aware, but this is your equivalent of our June as regards conditions.Yes, they are the wingless fly, there is only one on the queen..... ( a puff of tobacco smoke will kill the lot I'm sure).
Thanks Into the Lions Den. I'd like to save her....I really think she is fine, but needs to be given a chance with more assistants.
to just add more bees a cupful will not cut it...you need to add at least a kilo, if not more.
Another way to boost the colony: add a frame of emerging brood and on a flying day and on a flow, swap box places with a strong colony.I really think she is fine, but needs to be given a chance with more assistants.
Thanks very much ITLD. Lots to think about here and I want to pick your brains and experience to explore the disease issues please.FWIW...though it is scant evidence.......my thoughts about nosema...or other issues such as acarine or a paralysis virus stems from a single bee in the picture. Look at the wings on the worker right on the edge of the group at the 10 o'clock position. K wings....not a well bee.
Enter your email address to join: