In a message dated 26/04/2007 04:37:31 GMT Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
TM has always shown symptoms in my
bees. Hoppers are common and found as far a fifty feet from the hives.
Usually they show wing damage but sometimes only hoppers or crawlers. Some
even stagger or tremble.
".....the notable entomologist Imms (1907) ......differentiated the disease
from paralysis because of the lack of a dark appearance and trembly motion
often alleged at that time to be characteristic of bees with paralysis."
".... Rennie et al (1921) had observed that many [TM] infested colonies
apeared to be healthy and that many individual bees severely infested with mites
also appeared to be healthy and foraging normally, whereas uninfested bees in
the same colony often showed severy signs of the disease."
Quotations from a lecture delivered by Dr leslie Bailey to the Central
Association of Beekeepers on 14th October 2000 and entitled 'The Isle of Wight
Disease'.
Chris
******************************************************
* Full guidelines for BEE-L posting are at: *
* http://www.honeybeeworld.com/bee-l/guidelines.htm *
******************************************************