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Date: | Mon, 23 Oct 1995 11:18:36 -0400 |
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> Hi Doug!
> Good question you posed! Some of the mail on the b-l, indicate varroa is to
> blame. Well, this has not been absolutely proven to be the 'whole' truth.
> Yes, sure, there is a certain link between varroa and deformed wings.
> But at least some current research is generally heading in the direction of
> varroa the vector! A carrier of viruses etc.
> So, there are a number of useful things you could be doing.
>
> 1. Send a sample of bees away (30-50 bees) for viral analysis. Put them in a
> match box. (I have no idea where you would send them in the U.S.A)
>
> 2. For colonies with serious wing damage, try and record the mite drop per
> day.
>
> 3. Certainly treat your colony with an acaricide if you have varroa!
>
> And you could consider looking at the following references
>
> DeJong,D. et al (1982) Weight loss and other damage to developing worker
> honeybees from infestation with Varroa. J.Apic.Res. 21(3):165-167
>
> Marcangeli,J. et al (1992) Malformations produced by Varroa on Apis in the
> province of Buenos Aires,Argentina. Apidologie 23:399-402.
>
> Bailey,L.& Ball,B.V. (1991) Honeybee pathology (2nd ed). Academic
> press,London.
>
> Anyway, good luck and let me know how you got on!
>
> Cheers Peter
>
SEND DEFORMED BEES TO THE AGRIC RESEARCH CENTER
BELTSVILLE MARYLAND USA ATTN: Dr. Hachiro
Shimanuki for expert analysis. IT'S FREE.
John Iannuzzi PhD * "Singing masons building roofs
9772 Old Annapolis Rd * of gold." --Shakespeare
Ellicott City MD 21042 usa * 20 Italian colonies
[log in to unmask] * 3-1/2 decades in beedom
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