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Date: | Tue, 5 Sep 1995 18:11:02 +0100 |
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On Mon, 4 Sep 1995, Adam Finkelstein wrote:
> Liz Day wrote:
>
> > It could be some kind of dominance behavior, where the 'muggers' are
> > showing their dominance over the 'victim'. I understand bumblebees
> > do this - keeps the other workers from getting too cocky and laying
> > eggs.
>
> Cocky? A little anthropomorphic, eh Liz?
>
> What about grooming for varroa mites? Did this colony have varroa?
>
> Adam
Hi all,
There is certainly a consensus for some kind of dominance behaviour,
I've seen it regularly so I'll try to observe more and see if this
does appear so. They are certainly not queenless -- when they are at
shows I'm pointing her out to people every few minutes (breaks the
ice at parties :-), so that's not the trigger. It might be an effect
of them being in a very small hive though? There can't be more than
a couple of thousand BAS, the rest of the two frames is now
wall-to-wall honey and there are many possibly bored workers. Also,
the small size may be a little worrisome for them?
I cannot see any varroa in the hive, although it's probably there
somewhere as it's in all the rest now. However, I guess it could be
a response to a general feeling of irritation. I could see the
'victims' quite well and there was no sign of a mite on any of them.
I don't *think* mites are the reason, but I keep an open mind about
these things. _Especially_ if this looks like a grooming response.
Regards,
--
Gordon Scott [log in to unmask] CompuServe 100332,3310
[log in to unmask] CompuServe 100070,413
Beekeeper; Kendo 3rd Dan; Sometime sailor.
The Basingstoke Beekeeper (newsletter) [log in to unmask]
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