In the US queens from the Promorsky region in Russia were imported, Varroa entered this area around the 1900s. So ball park 100 years before the much of the UK, They’ve been trailed and researched
https://entomologytoday.org/2017/04...y-bees-might-not-prevent-varroa-infestations/There’s several other trials/references and again they’ve been in contact with varroa 100years!!! longer.
Oh dear. You really should read the peice:
From your link (from a non-bee-scientist reporter) (but she gets it about right:
"
The number of mites hitching rides into to a colony on foraging bees is key because the hygienic behaviors that suppress Varroa infestations in Russian honey bee hives may not be effective against these hitchhiking mites. Indeed, DeGrandi-Hoffman and colleagues found that at a study site where similar numbers of foragers with mites were observed at Russian and European honey bee colonies, the two types of colonies showed similar levels of mite infestations. At another study site,
where fewer foragers with mites were collected at Russian hives than at European hives, the Russian colonies had smaller Varroa populations.
This suggests that
when there are few foraging workers transferring mites between colonies, the Russian honey bee’s mite-resistant behaviors are able to suppress Varroa populations relative to mite populations in European colonies. But at locations or times when there are greater numbers of foragers with mites, Russian honey bees may be just as susceptible to Varroa infestations as non-mite resistant bees."
From the originating paper:
Abstract
Varroa (
Varroa destructor Anderson and Trueman) is an external parasite of honey bees (
Apis mellifera L.) and a leading cause of colony losses worldwide. Varroa populations can be controlled with miticides, but
mite-resistant stocks such as the Russian honey bee (RHB) also are available. Russian honey bee and other mite-resistant stocks limit
Varroa population growth by affecting factors that contribute to mite reproduction. However, mite population growth is not entirely due to reproduction.
Numbers of foragers with mites (FWM) entering and leaving hives also affect the growth of mite populations.
If FWM significantly contribute to Varroa population growth, mite numbers in RHB colonies might not differ from unselected lines (USL). Foragers with mites were monitored at the entrances of RHB and USL hives from August to November, 2015, at two apiary sites. At site 1, RHB colonies had fewer FWM than USL and smaller phoretic mite populations. Russian honey bee also had fewer infested brood cells and lower percentages with
Varroa offspring than USL. At site 2, FWM did not differ between RHB and USL, and phoretic mite populations were not significantly different. At both sites, there were sharp increases in phoretic mite populations from September to November that corresponded with increasing numbers of FWM.
Under conditions where FWM populations are similar between RHB and USL, attributes that contribute to mite resistance in RHB may not keep Varroa population levels below that of USL.
That is pretty much the opposite of your reading.
I can’t find any instance’s of bees from these areas being taken and field trialed by researchers and finding they are tolerant. We’ve seen endless claims made and none have resulted in the silver bullet. As above these instances appear beekeeper/environmental/virus related not the bees development of tolerance.
First, there may be some you have missed. You seem super-eager to 'find' a particular result. maybe you should read a bit more widely.
Second: there is no silver bullet. Your need a continuous process of improvement in each generation. Either you breed that or you let natural selection do it for you. You need to be doing that _in the company of the mites you will find at the place the qeens end up living_. Why? because the mix of techniches and strategies the bred resistant bees will be using will be specitice to those mite. Arms race, remember? Its an ever-shifting picture.
For example.
1. The much quoted Arnot forest bees failed in field trials and testing.
Seee above, last point: and also this was early in the journey to build resistance
4. Ron Hoskins bees in the Uk for decades claimed as tolerant. When researchers finally got there they found a lesser form of DWV. He’s now breeding virus resistant bees!
Hoskins is a breeder. That's not what I advocate and argue for here.
As to the Blenheim bees there are several claims, DNA results appear to be very slow for this new eco type bee. There’s a large BFA member who has hives butting up to the estate to top it off
That won't be helping of course, but it may not be fatal. Can you give an account of why, and how to evaluate it?
Please try to focus on the proposed explanation for the oft-reported phenomena of bees that live wild, and need no treatment in the UK and Ireland, as well as those populations reported to be ongoing, as seen in scientific papers supplied to this very blog.
Again: core explanation:
...the potency of natural selection...
Heath-giving traits (here, the varoa defence mechanisms) are heritable.
The least heathy bees die before reproducing. Zero inheritance, gene pool/next generation not supplied with inadequate genes
The most healthy bees supply the most genes to the gene pool. That is, the heath-giving (heritable) traits. Most healthy genes (traits) supplied in greatest number to the gene pool (next generation).
(in the middle, the more healthy traits, the more genes are passed into the next generation.)
Given natural selection those genes supplying health giving traits are thereby concentrated in the next generation; while those supplying the least healthy traits are eliminated.
Beautiful, no?
This happens in every single free-living organism. If it didn't, the species would become extinct.
Its not a question of belief. Its a question of does Darwinism apply? The scientific answer to that is, absolutely, its in no doubt at all.
That is the proposition: that Darwin applies as the explanation for the phenomona.
Yes, there are many many claims by amateurs that turn out to be ill-founded and possibly false. There are always daft people saying daft things: that's the world we live in. So what. So we focus only on scientific studies AND READ THEM CAREFULLY
What this thread is about is how to maximise your chances of succeeding in being treatment free, in the knowledge that science reports it is sometimes seen.
To do that we need to understand well how natural selection works (and that is easy - I just gave a summary above - but some people may need to study and think about it.); and, how to maximise our chances of giving it a chance.
THAT IS OUR TOPIC. PLEASE FOCUS ON THE TOPIC!