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Date: | Thu, 23 Nov 1995 20:10:48 -0500 |
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I'll throw out the following for review and comment:
This August, one of my hives had what I first thought was European Foulbrood
(bad brood pattern, and dead shrunken larvae in cells). An ether roll test
got 10 Varroa mites/300 bees (~1% infection rate). The ether roll test
results were about what I expected, as the colony had been treated with
Apistan early this spring. The dead larvae were still white, everything was
dry, and August was a dry month.
One of our bee inspectors declared the problem to be the early stages of
Parasitic Mite Syndrome (PMS, and I hope somebody thinks of a better
acronym). Apistan strips were installed, and the problem had cleaned up when
I next visited the colony 6 weeks later.
Everything seems to fit the descriptions of PMS that I have read, except the
low mite count on the ether roll survey. Anybody out there have similar
experiences?
W. G. Miller
Gaithersburg, MD
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