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Tue, 1 Jan 2008 14:39:00 EST |
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In a message dated 01/01/2008 18:57:23 GMT Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
Nosema apis populations
exploded when bees were stressed during cold weather, or when colonies were
chilled.
Normally bees deposit their faeces outside the hive and this limits the
passage of Nosema from one bee to another. However, when they are unable to do
so, for example when shut up for transport, they will soil the combs. This has
to be cleaned up by the bees. One of the first jobs a worker bee does as a
junior is to do the cleaning. The tool she uses is her tongue. The next job she
goes to is feeding the babies using the same tongue now contaminated with
nosema spores.
I don't suppose people will give up transporting hives to the almonds and
elsewhere, but maybe it would be a good idea on arrival to shake the bees onto
fresh comb/foundation/starter strips and dispose of the old comb and frames in
a way that bees can't get at them; preferably sustainably. They might need
a quick initial feed to get them over the shock and initiate comb building.
This is said to stimulate pollen collection (although I am not sure whether
this is so in the absence of brood) but in any case the grower has in his
orchard a colony of adult bees with no brood to look after and so they can ALL
(except queen and drones) go foraging and pollinating, which is what he's
paying for. The flowering season is probably over by the time any brood that was
in the hive would normally forage.
Shook swarms in a clean, disease-free environment frequently bounce back and
do better than those left on old comb.
Chris
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