"The Disappearing Trick" is a term coming into
common use among Australian bee-keepers, and there's
nothing funny about it, either. The older bees of a colony
disappear in a sudden and mysterious manner, the strongest
colonies appearing to be the ones most affected, causing
very heavy loss of colonies. The bee-keepers are asking
that government come to their aid by making investigations
looking to cause and cure.
AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL
CHICAGO, ILL, JAN. 8. 1903.
¶
It is now generally recognised that the
adverse climatical condition in early
spring is not the chief factor governing
the rapid depopulation of colonies by —
what some apiarists have appropriately
termed — "The Disappearing Trick."
From the suffering apiarist's standpoint,
a better descriptive title could not be
found in the English language to dis-
tinguish this extraordinary phenomenon.
" One morning — -it was clear and warm
— we missed the usual humming, and,
although surprised, felt sure that the
flight had been diverted, from some cause
or another, to a different point of the
compass. Curious, but not apprehensive,
we visited the yard, and at once per-
ceived that while a number of bees left
the entrances none returned.
The workers did not leave the hives with that
sudden ' shoot ' that betokens vim and
thriftiness, but delayed on the bottom
board in an indecisive manner before
taking wing. They seemed reluctant to
leave. Alarmed, we opened hive after
hive to find only full combs of honey,
sealed and unsealed. Rarely, there was a
small cluster of bees, together with a
queen, which later on swarmed out and
hung promiscuously about the yard. We
did not use any curative measures, be-
cause the whole thing was so sudden and
unexpected."
The writer elicited these additional
facts. The yard contained nearly two
hundred colonies, of which number only
some half-dozen remained normal and
apparently unaffected. Some of the
colonies absolutely devoid of bees con-
tained a few cells of sealed and unsealed
larvae. The queens were all reared from
the same stock, most of them sisters to
the survivors. The losses occurred so
early in the season that many queens had
not commenced their oviparous duties,
while some hives showed a few eggs only.
British Bee Journal AND BEE-KEEPERS' ADVISER.
VOLUME XLIV. January-December, 1916.
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