Jerry Bromenshenk wrote:
> We've
> also seen tracheal mites in high levels in recovering hives (but these mites
> were not in the same hives before collapse).
Got me confused on that one. How did they know they did not have
tracheal before the collapse but suddenly had high levels afterward? It
does not make sense.
Tracheal mites tend to be the forgotten mites since everyone's bees are
now immune to them. Only problem is we have many colonies in Maine that
collapse from Tracheal and all are from hives that "do not have
Tracheal", at least before the samples were sent in. I still think that
many Varroa problems are actually Tracheal. It is just easier to see a
Varroa mite on a drone pupa, than to pop off a head and look through a
scope to find Tracheal.
Bill Truesdell
Bath, Maine
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