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Wed, 18 Apr 2012 01:59:33 -0400 |
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>If you go way back in the archives, even at the height of real CCD, the
percent of colony deaths related to CCD against all other factors, was less
than 5% in the US.
I'm not sure where you are getting these numbers
From USDA winter mortality is ~32-33% as a mean for past 5 years
Before that (06), I do not think the number was as high, maybe 18-20%
So how much of that 12% is a result of ccd? (over a 2.5M+ hive population?)
and what about the rest of the world? where are their statistics?
In all the years before 06 I never had a deserted hive.
Since, I have seen 24 ?
--------------
This should be a seperate letter, but i'm lazy
What I found 2 weeks ago makes me very puzzled
The 2 deadouts in the S yard were full of wax moth
Not as severe as the worst I have seen, but nearly.
No live worms, most cocoons dead, no cloud of moths when lids lifted
But I thought those 2 were a ccd collapse, no bees, an unrobbed super.
I am sure I split the boxes to see that there were no bees.
Was it such a warm winter? Am I going senile? Was it ccd? Am I blind?
Certainly very puzzled
dave
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