I made some drone frames this season and learned allot about mite placement
in cells as I picked open the pupae. I would have to pick randomly to find
the area of mites on the frame and when I hit the hot spot I could open
adjacent cells and find mites. It was not predictable where the mites would
be on the frames but they did congregate in one or two areas. I also noticed
allot of times I would see no mite on the pupae but if I watched the cell I
had pulled it from the mites would crawl out. I expected to see them on the
pupae but more times the mite evacuated the cell after the pupae was
removed.
I also have an OB hive and see the mites congregate on the bees too. I will
see a bee with two, three and four mites on it but then see hundreds with no
mites. They seem to all want to be on the same bee which to me doesn't make
since you would think the feeding would be better if they distributed
amongst the many. But that is not what I see, they like to be together for
some reason.
Karen Kimball
Maine
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