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Date: | Tue, 27 Nov 2007 13:56:28 -0500 |
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Randy Oliver writes:
“This was a rate of dispersal far slower than the AHB. Again, the
geographical barriers surely played a part.”
The geographical barrier issue would seem to be a significant one. AHB
has been for the most part traveling in parallel to the big mountain rages,
while the movement of European bees would have been going perpendicular to
them. So we would need to look more closely to get an accurate picture of
just how fast EHB is capable of spreading out before it encounters some
geographical or climatologically barrier. Never the less it’s clear that
AHB is capable of expanding within its habitable range much more rapidly
than EHB would be within its. The rate of expansion of AHB, then, may only
be useful in providing a benchmark in terms of how rapidly bees COULD
travel on their own under suitable conditions. Even scaling this top speed
of AHB back for the EHB case I think we would get, under more or less ideal
conditions, a potential rate of expansion of greater than 6 miles per year
which is the top rate that Rury mentioned. I realize that is kind of
speculative on my part, but it’s a starting point.
All this has significance in terms of how rapidly parasites and diseases
could spread over the continent or large sub regions of the continent if
transporting bees could somehow be controlled. What we are talking about
here is how much time does trying to stop the unregulated human transport
of bees, using enforcement measures, buy us, and is it worth the price we
would have to pay. It’s not clear to me. This whole matter might
eventually become moot if the rate of attrition of beekeepers in itself
results in sufficiently less human transport of bees.
Steve Noble
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