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Fri, 18 Jan 2008 11:27:08 -0500 |
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Peter Edwards writes: "I have seen it claimed that virtually all the stock
in the US has been bred from fewer than 800 queens,..."
From Purvis Bro's web site: "The Goldline bee represents one of the largest
if not the largest and therefore most diverse line of bees available
anywhere. We collected initial breeders from any and all credible sources
to include feral, New World Carnolian, Russian, purebred Italians (via
Australia), Carnolian, Caucasion, German Black and many other private and
commercial sources. The bottom line is we gathered any bee that had
potential and included it in our gene pool."
Peter, although this does not necessarily contradict the point you were
making, it does seem to indicate that a lot of diversity could be
incorporated into 800 queens or maybe even less. Presumably a breeding
program of any kind would have a certain goal; most likely to produce a few
good queens. But starting from a broad field and narrowing it down to just
a select few, the question becomes how much in the way of diversity is
completely lost? How may genes drop out of the pool?
Steve Noble
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