If you sit beekeepers, from large commercial operators to many of the
current hobbyists, together with researchers, policy makers, funders,
etc. in a comfy air conditioned conference room (or somewhere during
the winter break in beekeeping tasks) and ask all to visualize the
future, it is common to have conversations drift into the scenario
that all would use resistant stocks and no chemicals. Yet adoption
and use of these stocks in the hot and stingy fields does not match
the words in the comfy rooms. Many of us involved in efforts to
explore, develop, maintain and make available these materials ponder
the troubling discrepancy and its causes. Below is a potential list.
Obviously in the patchwork of beekeeping modalities in different
places and through time, different factors play varying roles. But
here it is, and if anyone thinks other factors should be added, or
looked at differently, or finds a factor that is the main vector, it
would be interesting to hear.
Intense loyalty to known stocks- Many beekeepers like the traits of
bees they have maintained for many years (family generations?) whether
their own or coming from known suppliers, or “pulled” as breeders from
their production colonies every year using their selection criteria.
Change to unknown material is obviously troubling or risky.
Partial resistance of even the purest available material - Most
genetic material, even in research experiments, on average only slows
the growth of varroa mites. So some sort of additional monitoring or
light treatment or delayed treatment is ultimately required. Some of
us have seen good numbers of colonies in controlled settings where the
mite numbers (total, relative, drops, etc.) actually decrease in
colonies, sometimes to the point where mites are hard to find. If
this were the average it would be equivalent to the best chemical
treatment, but these colonies are not the most common in most
"resistant" stocks.
Variable resistance between colonies - Even if the average response
to mites in a group of colonies is good, there is a lot of variability
between colonies in responses. If this variability is genetic, then
this is a problem. However, the known or perceived variability may be
a consequence of more measurements in experiments with genetic stocks,
whereas a lot of people making treatments simply rely on early results
showing that treatments work well and uniformly. And if a new
treatment is applied soon after, that possible variability is not even
detectable.
Complicated introduction and maintenance of traits - The breeding
system of honey bees (multiple mating, outcrossing, rapid turnover of
reproductives), no reliable way of storing material, and the small
size of the industry and market make the rapid incorporation to a
useful level in any group of apiaries very difficult. One cannot do
the equivalent of a farmer going to the seed store and getting all of
the material needed to plant the whole farm at one time. The same for
maintenance- true isolation is rare, and II is extremely laborious.
AND those doing these things are not duly compensated for their
efforts when one can go to “another seed store” and purchase queens
for rock bottom prices.
Poor standards for stocks - Anyone can put a name on anything and
sell it with no problem. A small set of breeder queens can be
purchased, daughters reared from them in any environment and a label
be put on the mated queens. Even worse if the graft is made from a
colony into which at one point a breeder queen was introduced.
Bad image of improved stocks - Certainly many have judged the merits
of stocks based on the expression of a number of commercially
important traits in either breeder queens intended to be used as
parents for outcrosses, or in material reared with some of the
problems outlined in (e). There are true problems in some material
made available perhaps too early in a breeding program, but judging
the breeding value of a colony or a stock from one experience or from
word of mouth given all of the above issues is a bit unfair.
The alternative, consistent, reliable, uniform control by using
products off the shelf is still the very attractive and risk-free.
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