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Sun, 9 Dec 2007 21:14:18 EST |
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We're working up our observations of CCD over a full year. The symptoms may
change somewhat with season. For example, a CCD colony in the fall or
winter, when the queen has shut down or only producing a small amount of brood
looks very different from a CCD colony in mid-summer when the queen is laying as
fast as she can. In the first case, you get depopulated colonies; in the
latter you get what appears to be slow growing colonies.
Excess of brood occurs during seasons when queen was laying right up to the
time of collapse. This symptom is not necessarily true in an area with
limited forage and the queen more or less shut down for the season. If the colony
has throttled back on brood in anticipation of winter, and the colony then
collapses, you may not see an excess of brood.
The absence of dead/dying bees, the lack of robbing, the lack of invasion by
pests seem to be more consistent symptoms. Again, we've seen some variation
-- CCD colonies in mid-summer will be robbed, but you've got to trigger the
robbing.
We've had some of our own colonies collapse with CCD, recover, then collapse
again during mid-summer, fall, and early winter. Symptoms change a bit with
season relative to egg-laying/brood rearing status and time of collapse. In
all cases, the collapse is a loss of older bees.
Finally, many of the most recent collapsed colonies from which we obtained
samples had N. ceranae.
Jerry
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