> The morphometry is only used as a confirmation. morphometry on it's own
> will give you a set of measuring tools and methods of analysis. You apply
> this measurement to colonies that you have selected from the intensive
> data that has been kept on each colony, in order that you can say I have a
> colony with XYZ characteristics that also lies within the racial type of
> the bee we wish to propagate.
If I'm reading that right, it looks to me as if you are saying that
morphometrics is only good for comparison and selection within a known
population of honey bees. If so, by extension, I would see that as
suggesting that the technique is not well suited to identifying the race of
unknown samples of honey bees.
Can you expand a bit on what you are saying and clarify that point?
Thanks.
allen
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