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>>Why does pale colored mites indicate there is emerging brood in a hive?
>
>The pail color is an immature mite which can happen only during
>reproduction cycle inside capped brood cell. When the bee emerges these fall
>off. They do not count as they cannot cause future damage.
Thanks Bill. I have been searching for a page that explains exactly where
the cutoff is between a viable and a non-viable young adult female mite and
yours comes as close as any.
The real question, though, in my mind comes from Randy's earlier comment:
"In a natural drop, if brood is present, about half of the mites that drop
"are ones coming out of emerging brood, that would not survive for
"more than a few hours (Lobb 1997 Mortality of Varroa jacobsoni
"Oudemans during or soon after the emergence of worker and drone
"honeybees, Apidologie 28:367).
I found that fascinating, since it explains things I have seen and provides
just enough information to make me really curious.
Can you shed any light on this question?
Jean-Pierre Chapleau provided this explanation:
http://www.honeybeeworld.com/diary/incl/bj10.h13.jpg
of which mites are to be counted, but did not indicate if they all can be
expected to survive after leaving the cell.
I have seen some fairly pale mites in alcohol shakes, so I gather
they at least were able to catch a bee and hitch a ride.
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