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Date: | Fri, 17 Mar 1995 14:49:00 -0800 |
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Malcolm Roe asked why both chemicals were not available in most
countries.
I understand that these chemicals are so closely related that should
a pest develop resistance to one, it would most likely be resistant to
the other. This has been given as one of the reasons flumethrin has not
been introduced to the North American market (not enough years of
effectiveness left to recover investment??). This would imply that the 2
products are not suitable for an "alternation of control" strategy to
avoid resistance.
There appears to be a great difference in concentration of active
ingredient in the products available, however.
Bayvarol has a much smaller concentration of flumethrin (a few (3?)
milligrams per strip, anyone have a label handy?) than Apistan hive
strips, which are labelled as 10 % fluvalinate. (1 strip is 6 grams. 10
% fluvalinate = 600 mg/strip). Unless a different method of expressing
concentration has been used, it looks like flumethrin is active at less
than 1/100 of the concentration of fluvalinate. Any speculations on the
implications of this difference?
By the way, Malcolm, are 4 Bayvarol strips the recommended treatment for
1 hive? (a normal-sized colony, in ____ (fall?)).
Is fall treatment recommended? is spring treatment an alternative?
Are treatments in both spring and fall sometimes necessary (when
re-infestation from un-managed colonies is high).
Is there concern or a tendency for people to re-use the Bayvarol strips?
Kerry Clark, Apiculture Specialist
B.C. Ministry of Agriculture
1201 103 Ave
Dawson Creek B.C.
V1G 4J2 CANADA Tel (604) 784-2225 fax (604) 784-2299
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