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Date: | Fri, 5 Nov 2010 12:48:26 -0600 |
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>> (I had been adding hygienic and supposedly varroa tolerant stock).
> I would be interested in your opinion on how you would rank the queens you
> have been using.
I have no real way short of using liquid nitrogen, which I did not. The
fact that I was seeing patterns tending towards shotgun that got more solid
up when I medicated suggests that they were hygienic. The fact that I saw
some AFB breakdown eventually suggests that they were being challenged and
responding well up to that point. What was interesting was that the most
prolific hive was the first to show AFB this year. (Bob will comment, I am
sure).
> What I know about hygienic queens is their daughters should pull larva
> infected with brood diseases before it is visibly noticeable?
Yes, and they should also refill those cells if the queen is good, to create
a fairly solid pattern although that does not always happen, or happen
immediately.
> I understand how they are developed but having difficulty in my mind in
> how that trait is maintained at a high level without a high level of
> consistent pressure from brood disease/mites as it is a recessive gene. My
> thought is in an isolated breeding yard this trait may recess to match the
> need in the breeding yard but may not be up to par outside that
> environment where a higher level expression of that trait may be needed.
This is the problem, and why most beekeepers rely on breeders to do that
work, and buy queens regularly to boost the levels and frequency resistance
traits in their yards.
It is also also why researchers are working hard at identifying and proving
markers for quickly and easily identification of queens with or without the
desired traits using proteomics. Current methods are slow, expensive, and
almost impossible for the casual beekeeper or for beekeepers who are
occupied with other things like producing honey, pollinating, raising queens
in quantity or working at a second job. (That is not to say that it is
impossible. There are some talented and devoted amateurs).
Selection requires education, work and discipline.
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