Juanse asks:
As robbing depend on environmental availability and insect demand, what
about the time of the year of the dissapearement?
Robbing of CCD colonies more or less completely absent during late fall,
winter, early spring. The absence of robbers and the number of days
equipment appears to be repellant to robbers shortens a bit in the late spring,
summer, early fall.
What about if this robbing spread the disease and therefore insects die and
robbing is stoped?
There is no robbing - that's the point. No wax moth, no hive beetles, no
honey bees robbing or invading.
Does the disease affect other insects as well?
No one knows, has looked. Claims that Africanized bees are resistant are
speculative - I've seen no data. One beekeeper thinks ants may be involved.
It is hard to believe that the robbers are able to detect the
"contaminated"
stores. Can ants, moth, bettles or other bees "detect" viruses?
But they may be able to detect odors released by the disease pathogen(s) or
sick bees. We tried hard to find a repellant. We found hundreds of
chemicals - but that was the problem, so many chemicals, couldn't find a
'repellant' simply because we didn't have enough time/money to test each
chemical. Some colleagues are trying a different tactic - testing for chemicals
from known pathogens for repellancy.
Allen states:
I have no idea how one can make a scientific observation on this point
(regarding lack of robbing), and
I have been mystified by this report from the start.
It is the only thing that justifies flagging this as a new phenomenon, in
my
opinion.
Dave Westervelt and I first reported this symptom. In CCD beeyards in FL
in Dec, 2007 - we had collapsed hives, failing hives, and always a few
better hives. In the better hives, we had so many hive beetles, the pollen
supplement patties moved about from the beetles underneath. In the collapsed
colonies - queen and small retinue of young bees - there were NO hive
beetles. And, a with less than a 1/2 frame of bees, with two deeps of comb
unprotected, at that time of year, unprotected comb should have been inundated
by wax moths - but no wax moths. Open the collapsed colonies - no robbing
by other bees. Open the best colonies and you got robbing. In all cases,
yards of 'healthy' bees were nearby, so there were plenty of robbers - and
day temperatures were in the 80s F.
Then we went to CA in the winter/spring. Four piles of CCD boxes in a
beeyard, each pile the size of a load of boxes on a semi-flatbed truck. Tarps
over the boxes, and boxes with 40 # or more of honey in each - yet no
robbing at all.
In the same field, there was the yard with the heavy collapse and the piles
of boxes (about 80% of the colonies perished), a yard of failing colonies,
and a yard of very good colonies - all within 200 yards of each other
(points of a triangle). Over 5,000 colonies in that field. No robbing in the
CCD group, little robbing in the group of colonies beginning to fail, and
every queenless colony in the good group was covered with robbing bees and
stripped of stores.
More than a month later, bees finally began to rob the tarped stacks of CCD
boxes.
Similarly, our FL beekeepers reported that sitting CCD boxes out to air -
no bees would touch any of them for several weeks. In TX, bee less and
weak bee colonies showing CCD, with lots of remaining honey, were not robbed
by their healthier neighbors, even when the tops were removed, and 1 frame
pulled up above the rest, and left to open induce robbing. Two weeks later,
open hives with lots of bees around in the yard - yet all of the honey
still in place. (Beekeeper figured he'd let healthy colonies rob out the
honey from the collapsed colonies - but they wouldn't touch the open hives).
Don't need statistics for these types of response. It seems that when
bees begin to rob CCD hives, then you are safe to re-populate the equipment.
Force bees on to it, and ~50% of those colonies are likely to fail -
observations from several CCD operations that we checked, where the beekeeper
tried to restore weak CCD populations by adding packages or splits.
And yes, I agree - this is the one unique symptom that I've not seen
before. Very odd.
Jerry
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