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Date: | Fri, 11 Apr 2008 10:54:35 EDT |
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I'll try to respond to several issues.
1) Re: Deadly bacteria in WA. Either Matt Shepherd from Xerces Society got
it wrong, or some reporter did.
Some WA bee operations have lost large numbers of colonies. We sampled some
in Jan, Steve Shepherd is currently shadowing some. Nothing particularly
new - no new bacteria that I know of, but, Nosema is present, and bee losses
running to 50% of colonies.
2) Its an open question of whether N. apis can be found in the U.S. anymore,
or whether N. ceranae has partially or totally replaced it. Same treatment
for both -- but N. ceranae seems to be much harder to control.
3) It takes another step to positively identify N. ceranae - our MSU
colleague can do this. I think we still have both species of Nosema - I suspect a
problem with the primers being used, since labs in other countries have been
getting somewhat different results with respect to presence or absence of N.
apis, and we still see spotting on hives in the spring. (If anyone has a
particularly bad set of hives with heavy, fresh spotting, please contact me, I'd
like to get bee samples to test for N. apis.)
4) The Spanish documented a shift from N. apis to N. ceranae, followed the
change over some years.
5) To understand how N. ceranae is affecting U.S. bees, its important to
know which fungus we are dealing with, rather than just assume its N. ceranae.
That's a research question that would be assisted by confirmation from the
industry.
6) There is a slight physical difference between the spores of apis and
ceranae, but I doubt that the average person can accurately make that call.
7) Missouri is one of the regions that still has a tracheal presence - its
not typical of all areas of the U.S. - sorry Bob.
Jerry
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