Hello All, The May issue of Bee Culture came today. Two particular articles caught my attention. The monthly column by Steve Sheppard is about N. ceranae. I always read Steve's column with great interest. After doing the research you can feel the concern for beekeeping as Steve writes. Steve does an excellent job as usual and his facts are correct however the article is like "n. ceranae 101". A real fight is going on right now to control N. ceranae around the world. I am as serious as a heart attack. Control is not easy and your bees can look normal and be about to crash. A couple quotes from Staves column: " Paxton (et. al.2007) point out that because the host -shift may have been quite recent , the rate of spread of n. ceranae worldwide was much more rapid than that of varroa destructor" Steve quote from end of column: "as we come to recognize N. ceranae to be a major new pathogen of A. melifera , with the potential to impact beekeeping in ways which could rival or surpass varroa destructor " Also in the issue Clarence Collison takes "A Closer Look" at deformed wing virus. We are seeing DWV in hives with low varroa loads, In his article Collison explains why. I admit everything in both articles I was aware of but all beekeepers need to be aware of the pathogen. The reason I bring to the lists attention. Honey B Healthy, small cell and beekeeping without treatments are not going to control N. ceranae. All U.S. beekeepers need to subscribe to both U.S. bee magazines. bob **************************************************** * General Information About BEE-L is available at: * * http://www.honeybeeworld.com/bee-l/default.htm * ****************************************************