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Date: | Sat, 24 Jul 2010 12:13:24 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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> I will cut off some capped comb, freeze it, and tell you what I can see
> inside when I have time. Which are the bets? Lots of varroa per cell?
I really don't know. I've wondered about this a long time. Recently, I
noticed that Max Disselkoen ( http://www.mdasplitter.com/ ) claims that all
the mites rush into the first cells after a broodless period and kill the
larva and themselves. by doing so.
That is in summer, though. Personally, I have doubted this, but have long
wondered about what happens after the broodless period in winter when only
small patches of brood are started and maintained for several weeks or more.
What happens in this timeframe could be very significant.
> The varroa is been sampled out of the outer cluster bees.
When there is brood, it has been shown that higher counts are found near
the brood. I don't know, though if this applies in winter.
I have been trying to make sense out of what Juanse posted and I have
re-organised the table that got jumbled by the email. One of the two
versions below should look good to most readers.
Here is the table arranged for verdana-type fonts:
Population Nosema Spores Varroa
Frames of Bees B4 After After V60 V300
Mar Jul Mar Jul Mar Apr Jul Count& Count&
(s) (s) (p) (p) Percent
Percent
O 7.5 5.0 5.93 4.45 446 21 3.8 5.8=10% 13.5=5%
F 7.4 4.5 6.18 4.35 418 33 2.9 1.6=3% 7.3=2%
O=oregano (n=40) / F=fumagilina (n=40)
s=sampled (10%) / p= whole population
V60=varroa sampled out of 60 frozen bees
V300=varroa sugar shaked out of 300 bees
Here is the same table arranged for fixed-width fonts:
Population Nosema Spores Varroa
Frames of Bees B4 After After V60 V300
Mar Jul Mar Jul Mar Apr Jul Count& Count&
(s) (s) (p) (p) Percent Percent
O 7.5 5.0 5.93 4.45 446 21 3.8 5.8=10% 13.5=5%
F 7.4 4.5 6.18 4.35 418 33 2.9 1.6=3% 7.3=2%
O=oregano (n=40) / F=fumagilina (n=40)
s=sampled (10%) / p= whole population
V60=varroa sampled out of 60 frozen bees
V300=varroa sugar shaked out of 300 bees
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