Sunday, 7 March 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : What Would Your Garden Look Like Without Bees?

Central Beekeepers Alliance : What Would Your Garden Look Like Without Bees?


What Would Your Garden Look Like Without Bees?

Posted: 06 Mar 2010 07:38 AM PST

While researchers are looking for the causes, honey bee populations around the world continue to decline at alarming rates. Given that more than a third of our food supply is dependent on pollination by honey bees, it is not an exaggeration to say that we have the potential for a major agricultural disaster. That's the bad news.

The good news is that there are many things that we as individuals can do to promote the health of the honey bee.

Bee the Solution:
bee-garden-calendar

  • Grow bee-friendly plants
  • Create a four-season sanctuary for pollinators
  • Become a beekeeper
  • Make a drinking fountain for bees
  • Buy local, organic, unpasteurized honey
  • Stop spraying
  • Support bee research

Endorsed by Bee Culture Magazine and Brushy Mountain Bee Farm, A Bee Lover’s Garden has produced a fundraising calendar to support the Eastern Apicultural Society's Foundation for Honey Bee Research. Kim Flottum, editor of Bee Culture Magazine, will chair a committee to review proposals and make the final recommendation.

What Would Your Garden Look Like Without Bees? was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

Sunday, 28 February 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - Worst U.S. Honey Crop, Ever!

CATCH THE BUZZ

Worst U.S. Honey  Crop Ever!


Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

Find out What’s New At Mann Lake right Here


2009 was a terrible year to be in the honey business. Bee Culture’s unofficial poll last fall came up with a crop estimate of 119 million pounds, produced by 2,223,000 colonies. The USDA on Friday released their figures. Though higher than ours at 144,108,000 million pounds of honey, it is still the worst honey crop on record. Ever. USDA figures showed a colony count of 2,462,000…a couple hundred thousand higher than our guesstimate.

Honey stocks left over from 2008 plus imports during 2009 totaled 248,571,251 pounds, and when you subtract the honey that beekeepers exported – 28,924,255 pounds, the final figure gives a nice picture of how much honey was used in the U.S. overall during 2009. That total figure is 363,754,996 pounds. If you divide that total figure by the average U.S. population for 2009, you get per capita consumption, which is, for 2009 - .903 pounds, or right about 14.5 ounces. Did you eat your pound of  honey last year?

. Last year it was .960 pounds, or 15.4 ounces per person. The figure most honey experts use is a pound a person every year, so though a tad off, these figures are still in the ball park.

The imported figure is daunting not unlike a lot of other foods we consume. The U.S. imported 211,418,300 pounds…or almost 60% of the honey we ate last year. That percentage has been creeping up slowly for several years and no end is in sight. Less U.S. production coupled with the fact that U.S. honey costs more than almost all imported honey makes that easy to understand.

The average price of honey increased 2 percent over last year’s prices, from $1.421 to $1.445 per pound. Retail prices, however, were even higher, rising from $2.247 to $2.784 per pound, or just over 50 cents a pound. That’s a hike by any standard.  

The last caveat for this report is that the USDA does not contact, nor count, beekeeping operations that have 5 or fewer colonies. There are a lot of these in this country and their production does add up, but for the most part, the honey produced by these beekeepers does not enter the stream of commerce, but rather is consumed at home, shared with neighbors and family, or sold to friends or coworkers.


 

Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.

 

 

 

 

Saturday, 27 February 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : New Honey Bee Exhibits at Canada’s Virtual Museum & Agriculture Museum

Central Beekeepers Alliance : New Honey Bee Exhibits at Canada’s Virtual Museum & Agriculture Museum


New Honey Bee Exhibits at Canada’s Virtual Museum & Agriculture Museum

Posted: 27 Feb 2010 05:10 AM PST

The Canadian Agriculture Museum in Ottawa announces a new exhibit to celebrate and educate the public about honey bees and beekeeping in Canada.
Taking Care of Beesness opens March 1st, 2010 — just in time to welcome March break visitors to the nation’s capital, if you’re heading that way — and it runs until October 2010.

Discover the essential role bees play in the pollination of many Canadian food crops such as blueberries and apples, as well as to the production of honey and many other by-products, while you explore the role and the tools of the beekeeper. Check out the Museum's live hive arriving in May and try to find the queen among all the workers and drones.

virtualmuseum-beesNot travelling to Ottawa?

You can still enjoy Bees, a Honey of an Idea, a new interactive “virtual” exhibit about bees, pollination, and apiculture presented by the Virtual Museum of Canada (VMC) and the Canadian Agriculture Museum.

Don’t miss the Hive Inspection Video, yummy honey recipes, and some great activities for school teachers, parents, and students of all ages… and maybe the rest of us, too!

New Honey Bee Exhibits at Canada’s Virtual Museum & Agriculture Museum was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

How to Keep Bees Like a 5 Year Old Kid

Posted: 26 Feb 2010 09:19 AM PST

Five-year-old Daniel helped his Uncle Don Miksha with the beekeeping chores at Summit Gardens Honey Farms near Calgary, Alberta in May 2008. We’re not sure who shot the video (Daniel’s father, maybe?), but it’s good fun to watch!

And if the family name sounds familiar to you… yes, this is the clan of Ron Miksha, author of the entertaining and educational Bad Beekeeping book, and his brother David Miksa, a Florida queen breeder — “one of about 50 specialists who are maintaining the endangered bee population by providing thoroughbred royalty to raise colonies,” according to the Chicago Tribune.

How to Keep Bees Like a 5 Year Old Kid was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

Wednesday, 24 February 2010

CATCH THE BUZZ - Häagen-Dazs, City Bees and Boy Scouts

CATCH THE BUZZ

Häagen-Dazs® supports proposed overturn of new york city beekeeping ban


Häagen-Dazs loves Honey Bees™ Campaign Highlights Critical Need for

 Backyard Beekeepers


Protein feeding pays off with better bee health, better survival, better production, and better wintering.  Learn More.

 Find out What’s New At Mann Lake right Here


The honey bee crisis in the U.S. continues to threaten the U.S. food supply.  Bad weather in the Midwest and East this summer and fall seriously impacted the health of a significant number of hives over the winter, adding to the already difficult problem of keeping the bees alive.  The shortage is sending almond farmers scrambling to find enough hives to pollinate the almond orchards in California this month.  With colony losses at approximately 30 percent over the last several winters, it is not surprising that fewer and fewer colonies are available.

 Not only is the honey bee endangered, so too are the caretakers of our petite pollinators.  Today, the average age of a commercial beekeeper is 60 years old.  Beekeeping is a dying art that needs to be sustained and supported. To highlight the importance and need for more apiary enthusiasts, the Häagen-Dazs brand announced today the focus of its Häagen-Dazs loves Honey Bees™ (HD loves HB) campaign this year to help keep the hobby – and the hive – alive and buzzing.

 First, the ice cream maker is calling for support to overturn the New York City Health Department’s ban on beekeeping, set to be reviewed on March 16, 2010. Lifting the ban would allow city residents to keep bees without the risk of violating the current health code and being fined $2,000.  The Health Department currently considers honey bees to be wild animals. More information can be found at http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/legalize-beekeeping.html.

 Unlike commercial beekeepers, backyard or hobbyist beekeepers typically have a small number of hives. The bees pollinate local gardens and plants and also help the honey bee population’s genetic diversity.

“More beekeepers means more honey bees, and that’s what we need right now,” says Dennis vanEngelsdorp, former president of Apiary Inspectors of America and Häagen-Dazs Bee Board member. “By allowing New York City residents to keep bees without penalty, more people will be encouraged to take up this hobby that’s both rewarding and important for our troubled bee population. Good pollinator health is crucial for all of us.”

The brand announced today it is also joining forces with 13 year-old Boy Scout Christopher Stowell, Troop 250, Skiatook, OK.  Christopher is also a beekeeper and is petitioning the Boy Scout Council for reinstatement of the Boy Scout Beekeeping merit badge that was discontinued in 1995.  To sign the letter and petition, visit “The Buzz” page at http://www.helpthehoneybees.com/#buzz.

“Now, more than ever before, the survival of the honey bee is important to us all,” said Stowell. “If other kids are not encouraged to learn how to become beekeepers, the honey bee will surely die out.” 

 

“Christopher is an amazing advocate for honey bees and serves as a great example of learning about a problem and working to find a solution,” said Mara Lowry, Häagen-Dazs brand manager. “It’s because of people like him that we continue to be encouraged and inspired to work to help both bees and beekeepers, and we urge everyone to do their part. Signing this letter and petition is one small but impactful thing people can do.”

 

Häagen-Dazs loves Honey Bees™ Program Encourages Consumers to Take Part

 

Committed to being part of the solution, the Häagen-Dazs brand is renewing its efforts for a third year to help in the preservation of honey bees and nature’s finest ingredients.  In 2010, Häagen-Dazs ice cream will continue to support Pennsylvania State University and the University of California, Davis, bringing the brand’s total donation to $620,000 over the past three years. In addition to university funding, the Häagen-Dazs brand is also continuing its Vanilla Honey Bee ice cream flavor and HD loves HB™ icon labeling on all packages of bee-built flavors of ice cream, sorbet, frozen yogurt and bars to drive awareness of the ongoin g issue.

 

 The brand encourages everyone to find a way to become a bee crusader, and do their part to help save the honey bees. Here’s how to make a difference:

 Start a hive and become a backyard beekeeper – your garden will thank you for it. Look for a beekeeping club in your area to help you get started.

  • Create a bee-friendly garden with plants that attract honey bees. Select a plant with a long growing season or a group of plants that together will offer flowers from spring through fall.  A great resource for information can be found at www.helpthehoneybees.com, or from the horticulturalist at your local plant nursery. 

  • Avoid insecticides in your garden.  Instead, promote good bugs (called ‘beneficial insects’) – bugs that will happily eat the bad bugs chomping on your plants.  More information is available at www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/ and http://horticulture.psu.edu/extension/mg.

  • When you buy a Häagen-Dazs ice cream bee-built product, a portion of the proceeds of the sale go toward helping the honey bees.

  • Tell a friend – Visit www.helpthehoneybees.com to send a Bee-Mail or to create your own animated honey bee to help spread the word.

  • Visit the Häagen-Dazs Bee Store at www.helpthehoneybees.com All proceeds from our bee store will fund CCD and sustainable pollination research at Penn State and UC Davis.

About Häagen-Dazs loves Honey Bees™

 

Alarmingly, over the last three winters, more than one in three bee colonies died nationwide.  Researchers are calling the mysterious bee disappearance Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD).  Because the Häagen-Dazs brand uses only all-natural ingredients in its recipes, more than 50 percent of the brand’s flavors are bee-built, meaning they use ingredients pollinated by the bees.

 

In 2008, the Häagen-Dazs brand launched the HD loves HB campaign to create awareness of the honey bee crisis.  A portion of the proceeds from the sale of HD loves HB labeled flavors fund sustainable pollination and CCD research at Pennsylvania State University and University of California, Davis, totaling $620,000 over three years.

About Häagen-Dazs

 

Crafted in 1960 by Reuben Mattus in his family’s dairy, Häagen-Dazs is the original superpremium ice cream.  True to tradition, Häagen-Dazs is committed to using only all-natural ingredients in crafting the world’s finest ice cream.  Truly made like no other, today Häagen-Dazs ice cream offers a full range of products from ice cream to sorbet, frozen yogurt and frozen snacks in more than 65 flavors.  Häagen-Dazs products are available around the globe for ice cream lovers to enjoy.  For more information, please visit www.Häagen-Dazs.com.

Subscribe to Malcolm Sanford’s Apis Newsletter right here For a comprehensive listing of beekeeping events around the country and around the globe, check out Bee Culture’s Global Beekeeping Calendar

 

 

This message brought to you by Bee Culture, The Magazine Of American Beekeeping, published by the A.I. Root Company.

 

 

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Starting a New Bee Hive

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Starting a New Bee Hive


Starting a New Bee Hive

Posted: 20 Feb 2010 09:18 AM PST

In this video, Colorado beekeeper Dan explains how he installs a 3-lb package of bees with queen into their new hive, showing the protective clothing, tools and equipment that he uses.

He places his hives on a hivestand (base) with a sloped landing deck on the front, set up on wooden pallets levelled into the ground to keep everything dry. His supers are 10-frame full-depth and the frames are filled with plastic foundation — more durable than wax, “and the bees don’t care,” he says. A thump of the package sends the bees to the bottom, then he sprinkles a little sugar water to distract them before dumping the bees into the new hive.

The process for installing the caged queen is demonstrated: removing the cork from the cage and replacing it with a piece of candy that the bees will eat away in a few days, releasing the queen.

An entrance reducer cuts down on the territory that this small new colony will need to protect. Sugar water (syrup) in a feeding jar with holes in the lid is provided for the bees to find and feed on, as it’s too early for forage plants to be much in bloom. Interestingly, he uses a field feeding system — the feeder is set out near the hive, rather than placed directly in or on top of the hive.

You’ll notice a two-wire electric fence set up around the hives. Dan explains that Colorado has quite a bear problem, and the 9000-volt fence gives enough of a jolt to the nose of any curious bears that they’ll keep away. It’s a “short pulse” current, however, so no real harm will be done to the bears or to any passing pets or children.

Later in the video, three days later, you’ll see that it seems like the queen didn’t make it out, so Dan comes to the rescue. He opens the cage, taking care that the queen won’t fly away, and shakes her gently into the hive between the frames.

If you have any comments or questions about this video, please contact Dan by email at mtnbee@msn.com.

Starting a New Bee Hive was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

Saturday, 20 February 2010

Apis Newsletter February 20, 2010




Dear Subscribers,

I find myself way behind this February of 2010.  A perfect storm of things has conspired to keep me from delivering this edition of the Apis Newsletter on time. right on the heels of the mega North American Beekeeping Conference in Orlando, I signed up to address the Southeast Organic Beekeepers event in Palm Beach County and the Georgia Beekeepers Association in Moultrie, GA.  Finally, I am in agreement with my friend Dr. Eric Mussen at the U of California, Davis says in his Nov/Dec 2009 newsletter From the  UC Apiaries, "I can't keep up" with all the information.  Now I'm trying to keep up with world  events through the Global Beekeeping Calendar.

On top of this has come the unexpected cold that seems to linger, including snow in Moultrie in south Georgia last weekend.  The maples and willows have  popped as is there habit in early February each year.  How much pollen the bees were able to get to begin population buildup is only a guess at present.  If they are like us humans, they will find themselves behind the eight ball; a lower population level for them, significantly inflated power bills for us.  On the other hand cold weather may shock the maples into secreting nectar and the citrus also.

No doubt this long cold spell and snowy winter adds fuel to global warming skeptics' arguments, but we have always taught in apiculture that averages are more important than local short-term events; thus photoperiod is what the plants and bees go by rather than localized temperature, but although more predictive in the long run, everyone can be caught short during extremes.  And it is the preponderance of extreme weather events that are on the climate change scientists' minds, rather than "global warming." 

The Southeast Organic event  was certainly different, featuring Sam Comfort, large-scale beekeeper turned small-scale advocate of top bar hives .  I have a running dialogue with the organizer of the Southeast event who wants "no scientists, just good beekeepers," the motto of last year's event.  There is something to be said, however, for hands-on activity rather than lecture, which includes offbeat ideas like manipulating honey bees at night and doing a "cut out" on site from a chest of drawers.  Also present was Beekeeper Linda Tillman from Atlanta, who described the event on her blog.This is a popular event; look for the third edition to be organized next year.

The Georgia meeting featured more scientists, including yours truly, Jennifer Berry and South carolina's Dr. Mike Hood.  The resurrection of Patsy cline at Rossman Apiaries during a snow event was surreal, but featured also down-to-earth fried fish and shrimp in classic Georgia style. 

I have a special place in my heart for Rossman Apiaries, where I started my short commercial beekeeping career and went on to write a series for The Speedy Bee on this experience  Linda Tillman was also there as I guessed the correct weight of a couple of set ups.  Don't ask me how.

Hunting for Bees:  We are excited to announce Bee Hunt, an opportunity for you and your group to participate in science research about the natural world.  Many of you already know about our Bee Hunt project, but some of you do not, and we want to get the word out far and wide... help us spread the word!  Bee Hunt is a project of Discover Life  (http://www.discoverlife.org). Discover Life provides unique online tools for studying natural history and tracking the impacts of ecological problems. We are building a network of study sites across North America and we’d like to invite you to participate!

There has been a great deal of discussion within the Florida State Beekeepers Association about food safety regulations.  Many small-scale bottlers find themselves with what they call an untenable financial burden.  Perhaps the best rundown on this issue is Dennis Riggs discussion on the Southwest Florida Association's web site.

Check out my February 2010 links at Publish2.com.  They include:  Apis cerana spread (big discussion on Bee-L about this), colony collapse disorder, bees as biocontrol of crows in Japan, Britian's train the trainer course, bees give warning of  danger, bees more efficient than cars, Phil Chandler The Barefoot Beekeeper and his podcasts, bees recognizing faces, old hive designs, and decline of bees in Europe,

Finally, check out Clint Walker's take on queen rearing and CCD.  This is a unique queen  producer perspective

Also make plans to attend the Brushy Mountain Webinar series.  The last one on urban beekeeping attracted a big buzz.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Gleanings from the February 2010 edition of Bee Culture:

See the current digital copy of Bee Culture at http://sample.beeculture.com

Allen Dick, swalwell, Alberta, Canada asks how can we evaluate pollen supplements. He looks at consumption rate and other issues. See more on his influential web site.  Maria Concilio, South Orange, NJ says to tell more folks to leave their gardens in a natural state and minimize lawns.  Harold Boretz, East Hampton, CT says enough!  He complains that beekeeping has gone to the dogs; he writes he's going fishing instead.  John Hoffman, Mt. Holly springs, PA answers many questions on open bottom boards.  Colin Taylor, Bury, Manchester, UK also writes  about screened bottom  board issues.  Sheri Kisch, Laurel, MT asks about apitherapy and MS (Multiple Sclerosis).  She is referred to the American Apitherapy Society. Thomas Mani, Yelm, WA argues that beekeepers shouldn't give up on small cell beekeeping in spite of scientific evidence that its falls short.

Ben and Teri Whitney, Ridge Manor, FL watches Bob the real live snake watch his bee hive.  Larry Krengel urges beekeepers to take the survey found at http://www.surveymonkey.com

Editor Flottum writes that producing local queens is not easy but very rewarding. Read his take on the various projects going on around the country.

New books for 2010 include Dr. Larry Connor's new essential volume on queen rearing and Dr. Reese Halters The Incomparable Honeybee and the Economics of Pollination. Finally, Dr.  Roger Hoopingarner's updates his classic The Hive and the Honey Bee Revisited - Annotated.

Clarence Collison takes a closer look at Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus and its relatives.  Read why it's relatively easy to detect IAPV, but not what to do about it.

Katherine Aronstein reports on the Coordinated Apicultural Project (CAP) and the potential for detecting nosema in time.  Read about this "dipstick" technology.

Roger Hoopingarner reviews some of L.L. Langstroth's findings as a bee biologist; he was not just a  "mover of boxes."

Larry connor tries to answer an important question from a reader; what kind of bee do I have?  Read his analysis of the North American honey bee story.

Ross Conrad reviews stress reduction techniques in bee  management.  Surprise! Chemicals (drugs and pesticides) are big culprits.  Read about the best ways to mitigate these stressors.

Joe Traynor writes his notes from the almond conference. Read how what happens in california affects beekeeping elsewhere.

Jim Tew takes a step back and contemplates doing more with less.  Read why being over 50 and doing all the work yourself is a good start.  Read what else he makes up as he goes along.

Kim Flottum profiles queen producer Jennifer Berry. Read how she plans to rear queens using the same principles as she has advocated in her printed column in Bee Culture.

Tom Obrien suggests meeting the Ontario Beekeepers Association's technical transfer team. Read about this innovative program and how it might be a model of things to come.

Jennifer Berry describes how beekeepers might play a significant role as citizen scientists looking at climate change and beekeeping.  Read her take  on Dr. Wayne Esaias' research project.

Abbas Edun writes about natural remedy plants.  Read about the benefits of Algarrobo, Agrimony and Glossy Abelia.

Walt Wright discusses taking the age distribution into account when making splits.  Read about the differences between second-year and established colonies and why he makes a distinction between the verb "split" and noun "nuc."

Mike Hood begins a series on integrated pest management for small hive beetle.  Read about the basics of beetle biology and how beekeepers might use this knowledge to keep beetle levels down.

Ann Harman says new beekeepers can be overwhelmed by all the newest, best items in bee catalogs.  Read about her big three:  tool, veil and smoker, and some surprising others, like  the cappings scratcher and tool container.

Dan Stiles takes on skunks, which he knows a lot about.  Learn about the skunk's most problematic characteristic, its size.  Maybe they should make an action movie about large-size skunks, complete with fumigation of the audience.

In All The News That Fits, my friend Medhat Nasr receives the Distinguished Achievement Award, Alberta Beekeepers Commission, two pioneers have died, beekeeping Milton carlyle Knoefler of California and Dr. E.W. (Bert) Martin, who retired from an academic life to become a U.S.D.A. Program Leader in pollination and bee management.  Read how bees and tractors team up, the spread of more exotic Asian bees  in Australia, and how the exotic asian hornet is spreading in Europe.  Finally, read reports of pesticide-resistant Varroa in New Zealand and the controversy about the Manuka  honey standard.

On the Bottom Board, Peter Seiling reports on his activities as the "bee whisperer," a combination of ancient alchemy and witchcraft that delights audiences and scares  them at the same time.  The bee performance artist emerges "to confront the nihilistic existentialism of Post Modernism's archetypal paradigm." Consider this the next time someone wants  you to do an interview.

Sincerely,


Malcolm T. Sanford
beeactor@apisenterprises.com
http://apis.shorturl.com

Bee sure to subscribe to Catch the Buzz, Bee Culture's latest releases of importance to beekeepers.  Also access the Apis Information Resource Center , which contains archived articles, listing of  posts on blogs, web sites, and links to related materials.  .

Wednesday, 17 February 2010

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse?

Central Beekeepers Alliance : Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse?


Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse?

Posted: 17 Feb 2010 05:00 AM PST

Beekeepers will be interested in highlights from an article published recently in Science magazine, called Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse?. It’s by Francis L. W. Ratnieks and Norman L. Carreck of the Laboratory of Apiculture and Social Insects, Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Sussex, UK.

Over the past few years, the media have frequently reported deaths of honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) colonies in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Most reports express opinions but little hard science.

It is not the mite itself that causes bee death, but a range of normally innocuous bee viruses that it carries.

A recent study of beekeeping history pointed out that extensive colony losses are have occurred at different points in time in many parts of the world. In other words, Colony Collapse Disorder is not the unique event that media attention would lead us to believe — and concern for honey bees has been “magnified by their vital role in agriculture” in the United States, where the $2-billion-per-year California almond industry depends on the pollination services of honey bees. Theories as to the cause of CCD have ranged from mobile phones and genetically modified crops (theories that were quickly dismissed by scientists) to more credible theories that have been the subject of more serious research: pests and diseases, environmental and economic factors, and pesticides.

Although full explanations for these losses are still debatable, the consensus seems to be that pests and pathogens are the single most important cause of colony losses.

There is also growing evidence that the ability of a particular pathogen to kill colonies may depend on other factors, such as the Varroa mire — but it’s not the mite itself that is killing bees, Ratnieks and Carreck point out, but the bee viruses that it carries and passes from one weakened, stressed honeybee to another.

Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse?
Francis L. W. Ratnieks and Norman L. Carreck
Science 8 January 2010: 152-153

Clarity on Honey Bee Collapse? was written and published by the Central Beekeepers Alliance - Honey Bees & Beekeeping in New Brunswick, Canada. For more information, please visit http://cba.stonehavenlife.com.

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