> I was told by a very reliable source via email that Roger Morse published a Florida extension pamphlet some 50 years ago that did roughly the same thing I did
In the 1950s, Roger was mostly at Cornell. There he earned all three of his post-secondary degrees: a Bachelor’s in 1950, a Master’s in 1953, and a Doctorate in 1955. In postgraduate work, he was State Apiculturist for Florida for two years. In 1957, he became an Assistant Professor of Horticulture at the University of Massachusetts, working there for six months before being appointed to the Cornell faculty as Assistant Professor. I don't guess this lends much credence to your argument. In the two years he was there, he published a few things:
Larval nematode recorded from honeybee Apis mellifera L.
Morse, R. A., Florida State Plant Board, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.A. J. Parasit. 41(5) : 553 (1955)
Out of 2111 adult worker honeybees captured foraging on flowers near Ithaca, N.Y., and examined for the size of their nectar loads, two had their abdomens nearly filled with a larval nematode of the genus Agamomermis.
The Scope of the Beekeeping Industry in Florida
RA Morse - The Florida Entomologist, 1956 - JSTOR
According to JJ Wilder (1928) one of the first apiaries of any size in Florida was established
in 1872 where the city of Daytona now stands. A company from New York City settled in the
Daytona area and attracted considerable attention by coming to Florida ...
A New Insect-Host Relationship
RA Morse, SH Kerr - The Florida Entomologist, 1957 - JSTOR
The accompanying photograph shows some rose stems collected in Gainesville. It will be
noted that the individual cells are not well differentiated. The maximum number of three cells
was found per stem in ten which were closely examined. The length of completed tunnels ...
Honey Bees and the Mediterranean Fruit Fly Spray Program
RA Morse, FA Robinson - The Florida Entomologist, 1957 - JSTOR
Since the start of the Mediterranean fruit fly spray program, we have received several
inquiries from beekeepers and entomologists concerning the hazards of the bait sprays to
honey bees in the sprayed areas. ...
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