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Date: | Tue, 9 May 1995 13:41:58 +0000 |
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Mike Bipsham wrote:
> Here in the UK varroa is now endemic. As an ecologically minded
> hobby beekeeper, I am unsure if I want to continue beekeeping if
> it means having to treat the hives with insecticide. Does anyone
> know of alternative treatments?
Please Note: I posted recently about some 'soft'
chemicals we are using. Someone asked me to expand
more. I'm unable to add very much and we're 'just'
beekeepers not a research establishment, however I
shall report what I can. Gordon
------------------------------------------------------------------
IBRA ([log in to unmask]) supply an information pack on Varroa
that makes good & useful reading.
Most of the alternative methodologies are fairly labour intensive
but feasible. IMHO the main alternatives are:
1) Drone Trapping.
Divide a frame into three sections, fit a starter strip of
foundation and place this near the outside of the brood nest.
The bees will (probably :-) draw drone comb on this (which is
what we want). Varroa prefer to lay in drone comb so we can
cut these sections out in rotation (one per week) whilst we
find a significant infestation. Makes a significant energy
loss for the colony as they put a lot of work into the drones
we kill.
2) Trapped Queen.
Trap the queen onto a (preferably unused) frame using a frame
sized cage of QX material to trap her on that frame. A week
later transfer her onto another similar frame and do it again.
A week later do it again, then remove and destroy the first
comb which by now will be sealed. A week later release the
queen and destroy comb two, in the final week destroy comb
three. A powerful method because the mites have no choice but
to lay in the trapped frames. Knocks the colony back a bit
though.
3) 'Soft' Chemicals.
Debatable what's 'soft'. Formic acid is the 'usual' stuff.
It's a natural and degradable pesticide used by ants. It is
however pretty nasty stuff for us. Handle with _extreme_
care. Lactic acid (naturally from milk) is used in a lighter
concentration (5% sprayed lightly onto the bees & combs) and
is supposed to work in a similar but less risky way than
Formic. I do know that it knocks down quite a lot of mites.
Our Association here (Basingstoke UK) have also been
experimenting with icing sugar or french chalk dusted onto the
bees & combs. The function of these is supposed to be purely
mechanical -- it gets onto the sticky pads on the feet of the
mites, they lose their grip and slip off. I've looked pretty
closely at quite a few and I think it's true because I can see
eight white feet. It seems likely that vigourous fanning by
the bees may help this happen. We don't know if there are any
side effects -- whilst the materials are pretty benign in
themselves, the drying effects may be significant. All these
are basically contact only on the adult mites, so treatment is
about every four days for four treatments.
The IBRA pack offers some other methods including heat treatment.
Regards,
--
Gordon Scott [log in to unmask] Compuserve
100332,3310
[log in to unmask]
Basingstoke Beekeeper [log in to unmask]
.
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