Peter wrote
> The other thing we have discussed in the past is the possibility that
> varroa in isolated colonies become inbred and suffer inbreeding
> depression, while the isolated > bees are still able to get out and
> outcross, creating vigor.
Trevor wrote:
>>If as Denis Anderson says that varroa started on mellifera because one
mite
>>recognized the signal to reproduce on mellifera, why would there be any
more
>>inbreeding in an isolated area compared to the whole population which
>>started from one mite?
It bears on the subject that the foundress mite lays eggs that result in a
male and some females. She then presides over brother-sister matings.
Inbreeding depression is not a very likely outcome with something this
kinky. I don't know what they are but was told by a top researcher that
mites do a number of things that result in their breeding health.
Dick Marron
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