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Date: | Tue, 2 Oct 2007 10:33:05 -0700 |
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I answered Peter Borst's posting off-line; he'd noted that he checks for
mites in his strongest hives. I thought his response of general interest
and copy it here:
On 10/1/07, Mea McNeil <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> > On the face of it, this seems to not make sense -- but this is what
I do.
> > Peter, It makes sense to me, as the mites are reproducing in a larger
> > number of brood cells. Mea
Hi Mea
What I meant was, it doesn't *seem* to make sense to look for mites in
the best hives, since one might think that these would be the best
able to defend themselves.
Unfortunately, a big strong happy hive is perfect for mites to thrive
in, and they quickly get the better of them. A lot of times a hive
that is pretty far gone from mite damage won't even have all that many
mites in it, giving a false reading.
I suppose the mites may start to jump ship as the colony fails -- but
who knows? Nobody has really studied the movement of mites between
colonies.
pb
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