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New Honeybee Breed Key to Combating Colony Collapse Disorder

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n2doc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-26-10 08:31 AM
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New Honeybee Breed Key to Combating Colony Collapse Disorder
by Jaymi Heimbuch, San Francisco, California on 08.24.10

A British beekeeper has been working on creating a new strain of honeybee resistant to the varroa mite, a prime suspect in colony collapse disorder (CCD), and it looks like he's hit a high note after 18 years of careful observation and selective breeding. Ron Hoskins found that bees in one of his hives figured out what a great idea mutual grooming can be -- they learned to clean the mites off one another. Hoping that this learned behavior is hereditary, he spread the genes of bees from this colony to his other hives. It worked. Now, combating CCD could be linked in no small part to how quickly the new strain of bee spreads across the country.

Daily Mail reports that the British Beekeepers Association is excited about the work Hoskins has done, and the hope is the drones from his "grooming" bees will mate with wandering female queens to spread the heartier genes across Britain. It could take quite a long time, and a lot of generations of bees before the behavior becomes normal, but if it's a way to combat the mites that wipe out entire colonies, then it's quite an exciting evolution to witness.

Hoskins, who is from Swindon, has named the new strain the "Swindon Honeybee" and all his colonies consist of this new breed. And the behavior might be the only thing that can save honeybees from the verroa mite:

Martin Smith, president of the British Beekeepers' Association, said: "The varroa mite is probably the single most important factor that has caused the reduction in bee numbers worldwide. It has now become resistant to chemicals we have used in the past so we are being forced to look into other methods."

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http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/08/new-honeybee-breed-key-to-combating-colony-collapse-disorder.php
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SPedigrees Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-26-10 10:11 AM
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1. If they'd just stop feeding the poor creatures HFCS
they wouldn't need all this selective breeding.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090826110118.htm

In the new study, Blaise LeBlanc and Gillian Eggleston and colleagues note HFCS's ubiquitous usage as a sweetener in beverages and processed foods. Some commercial beekeepers also feed it to bees to increase reproduction and honey production. When exposed to warm temperatures, HFCS can form HMF and kill honeybees. Some researchers believe that HMF may be a factor in Colony Collapse Disorder, a mysterious disease that has killed at least one-third of the honeybee population in the United States.
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