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Wed, 26 Sep 2012 06:33:12 -0600 |
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> If we want Varroa to be the minor irritant that acarine, chalkbrood
> and a long list of bee pathogens have become, then we need to breed
> better resistant bees.
Agreed, and in that particular avenue of attack on the varroa problem, I
can see that people are still focused on the mite as well as its side
effects and have their eye on the ball.
The problem is in spite of a lot of local apparent successes, that there
don't seem to be any clear breakthroughs. No bee has been produced that
seems to be able to handle varroa in all situations and also demonstrate
the qualities that commercial beekeeping demands.
I recall the work Danka and crew have been doing with Merrimac Apiaries
following commercial hives around the country and that all the bees were
seemingly surviving better than one would expect, so I really don't know.
Then there is the Primorsky line. It has been around a decade or more
apparently can withstand varroa with little or no intervention by the
beekeeper, but has not been widely accepted. Why?
That brings us back the question of whether we have been able to achieve
anything lasting in honey bee breeding thus far, or if our only
achievement has been finding and propagating better bees for our current
purposes.
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