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Date: | Fri, 14 Jun 2002 12:28:53 -0600 |
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> In my opinion it is your point of view which needs reinforcement in this
> discussion.
I'm not the one speculating on limited knowledge, and promoting the idea as
if it were supported by a prominent researcher who quite carefully avoided
saying what you are saying.
> ... valid points regardless of what Dr. Hoffman said. Capensis and
> scuts cross. Africanized bees are in the area of Dees hives and any of
those
> swarms could easily possess capensis genes.
Hmmm. Easily? And with all the firepower of the USDA aware of and looking
at this for a decade now or more, they have not been able to come out and
say that when they did a DNA test, this is what they found?
> Maybe we need to send some samples from Arizona for ID.
This has been done several times. The results -- AFAIK -- do not prove
capensis. Au contraire.
> Yes Allen I am saying that if those bees in Arizona are looking capensis,
> acting capensis , black in color (scuts are yellow *normally*) and posses
> ovarioles in larger number than a scut there has got to be a couple
> capensis genes tucked away in those bees in my opinion.
We know it is your opinion, and it is an interesting speculation, but can
you prove it?
allen
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