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Date: | Fri, 14 Feb 2003 22:07:09 +0000 |
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In message <[log in to unmask]>, Stan
Sandler <[log in to unmask]> writes
>Of special interest to me, was mention that glacial acetic acid fumigation
>for nosema would also control EFB (again, no reference).
Standard recommended treatment here in the UK is 80% acetic acid
fumigation in a stack of brood chambers but we are advised by our Bee
Officers it is not necessarily complete in contrast to its effectiveness
with honey comb.
> Would anyone have
>more information, or first hand experience with this? It does seem
>reasonable to me that a non spore forming bacteria should be easier to
>eliminate than AFB. However, in some places EFB contaminated comb is
>destroyed similarly to AFB, and some commercial beekeepers have mentioned
>how quick it can spread in an operation, and I concur.
And feeding back honey from EFB contaminated comb!!
>Also, I would like to know if anyone has tried a method of fumigating an
>entire storage building or area with glacial acetic acid (for either EFB or
>nosema)? I have tractor trailer van bodies over 40 feet long filled with
>supers, and it would seem to me that since they are fairly airtight when
>the doors are sealed (and the doors could be taped) that this should be
>possible.
The high concentration of fumes would need an enormous quantity of
acetic acid and corrode all your exposed metal.
--
James Kilty
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