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Africanized Bees - Are they really that bad?

70K views 203 replies 61 participants last post by  Michael Bush 
#1 ·
Has anyone had any actual experience with them?
I know that the media will basically prey on people's fears at times so I'm sure that Africanized Bees are overexaggerated in some ways.

I've always had an intense phobia basically regarding these bees :eek:

I adore bees and have always been fascinated by them. They have an extremely important role in our environment which is why I really wish to learn more about Africanized Bees and to understand them more which will hopefully lessen my fear of them.
 
#3 · (Edited)
AHB Aggression

I don't have a lot of experience, but did have some for 2 seasons. Like our more gentle bees their aggression is based on the amount of messing you do. Normally defenders will meet you about 20-30 ft before you get to the hive, if you turn around all is well. The closer you get the more challengers you get, this includes head-banging. Now to check or change supers, this is about all you get. If you want to check brood, or inspect in the brood chamber, you should be ready...all H*** is about to break loose.

After my first time, I learned to wear a full suit with thermals under it. They would follow me to the house 100 yards away, and swarm the windows trying to get in. After about an hour they would give up and go home. It wasn't safe to go out unprotected for many hours. They forget SLOWLY.

If you leave them be and give them their space all is well. They swarm around 4-6 times a year and produce about 2/3 the honey of the italians. No Mite or SHB problem though.

I had much better luck with them than I have had with the civil bees I have now.

Wanna know more PM me.

BTW: They were sold to me as italians and as a newbee I didn't know!!!
 
#4 ·
My experiences are similar to rw3212.

I have had a hive come back positive and it was the one I suspected. They defend a much larger area around their hive and when you open it up, they are after you. They would chase me around my house. Other breed never do that. I can go within 4-5 feet with non african hives and work my veggies without any issue. With the Africanized, I had to wear a veil all the time and my wife refused to go into the garden.

None of this is an issue now as all of my hives were requeened and since they have been gentle.
 
#16 ·
You are correct, that was in the heart of AHB country Hidalgo County Texas. The original AHB swarm found in the USA was 3 miles from where I lived at that time, The only non-AHB's there are in the managed hives. Let one supersede and it WILL be AHB positive.

This was all a few years ago also. I don't know the situation there now, but can't imagine it has improved as,
for-all-practical-purposes the ferel bees are at least hybreds.
 
#6 ·
I have had seasonal Brazilian beekeepers who work for me and in Brazil its all Africanized. I have visited Brazil also and spoke to many beekeepers there.

According to them you can't place hives next to each other like we do here in the USA. You don't drive your truck next to the hives. You use mega smoke and care when manipulating. But the amount of manipulation is minimal. They don't buy bees or raise queens as these bees are tough as hell. You put empty equipment out and the bees fill it with swarms.

When they attack its the stuff from horror movies. Bees in every orifice of
your body whether the orifice is covered with clothing our not. Run like hell or get in a building or vehicle our you dead if attacked.

This is the future of far southern USA someday. Slowly as beekeepers leave the profession and the AHB take over it becomes harder and harder to keep an European hive intact genetically. People scoff when I say this but why do you think Mexico and central America and places like Brazil are 100% Africanized? Right now some single digit percent of our industry is using AHB and selling them. This percentage will grow in the near future. At some point it will be almost impossible to get packages and queens from southern areas that are totally free of Africanized genetics.

The future of northern beekeeping is here now and its the beeks who are raising their own queens and nucs! Mark my words some day they will be selling their bees south in a reversal of what it has been traditionally. As the genetic depository of European Honeybees will be in the northern 1/3 or half of the USA not in south.
 
#193 ·
I live in Los Angeles and went to a talk last year by Eric Mussen, head of the apiary at UC Davis. He started his talk with this inflammatory quip. We use Africanized ferals in all our hives in our club and never buy bees or feed or treat. Mussen admitted he had never kept a hive of ferals, so my opinion of his distaste for them is that he is biased and judgmental.
I have had spirited discussions with him over various faulty experimental designs he has run to determine the effects of HFCS and antibiotics on package Italians. He claims the microbial gut flora of the bees he used was unaffected by HFCS or drugs, but he admitted that he did not measure or assess any of the microbe levels before he did the experiment to know what was already there, nor did he account for any epigenetics related to previous treatments, and he ran the test for a paltry 2 months. He also used a probiotic mixture formulated for CANINES (dogs) as a investigative aspect of the experiment---a useless factor, in my opinion. He told me he was admitting this investigation was "fast and dirty"
Africanized bees are here to stay and represent the fallout from our experimentation with bee genetics, importation, and pursuit of profit, with Nature having the last say.
 
#8 ·
Yup, all of that.

I picked up swarms in years past and I did not always requeen right away. Sometimes they were quite awful. Just like others said above.

I had one so bad that I could not drive into the yard and get out of my truck to put on my bee suit even though I was 150 feet away. I pulled into the yard one cloudy day and they were stinging the rubber gaskets around my windows trying to get into my truck. Needless to say, I did not open the door. I just drove away and came back another day to deal with them.

Now I either don't keep the swarms, or if I find nice large swarms I put them in a box and requeen them within a week.

Sometimes you've got to let them set up housekeeping in order to find the queen. Once they've got brood, but before it is capped they are still pretty docile, but once they have capped brood to defend, then they will get very defensive indeed.

Also the part about not putting them in a line is true too. If you put them all together in a line and one is Africanized it is hard to tell which one it is. I came up with a method. Golf balls. I sneak up on them from far away with my suit on. Try it on a nice sunny afternoon when a lot of bees are flying anyway. Start throwing golf balls at the hive. When you hit the Africanized one, the response will be quite obvious. A lot more bees respond to the thunk of the golf ball against the brood box.
 
#10 ·
walking bird writes:
I talked with one veteran beek on this forum who told me his Africanized hives would hit his veil so hard they would be squirting venom through the netting. A scary scenario...

tecumseh:
uhh I think you might need to consider basic bee bioliogy before you would repeated this story telling too often... I would guess such myth making would warm the heart of any newsperson???

if you will notice by name it it called an african HYBRID. hybrid by definition means a combination of two somewhat related species with the permutation of the possible offspring being almost infinite in number. the fabris score reflects this directly. so hybridization varies on a scale and given the current information on genetics even very pure european honeybees would contain aspect of pure african (it appears both are derived from the same progenator). Prior to the onset (or understanding) of modern day genetics and breeding even the european honeybee had a reputation of being extremely hostile.

my original mentors bees were apis mellifera mellifera (the german black bee) who defensive characteristics were quite similar to the african hybrids.

I guess based on what 3212 wrote... some folks contention that african bloodlines do not exist in Georgia can also be reduced to the level of myth.
 
#11 ·
I'm sure that Africanized Bees are overexaggerated in some ways.
Next time you can talk with your state bee inspector, ask him about the colony we re-queened in Kittery. It was a Buckfast package that came out of Texas. Absolutely ferocious. Tore up the neighborhood, and started a war among neighbors. Overexaggerated? I would say not!
 
#12 ·
This is all pretty interesting to me and no doubt to other beeks on this side of the ocean.

It is quite difficult given the docility of the modern bee to imagine just how difficult the AHB must be to deal with. It would certainly be no holiday keeping them in the suburbs and would probably rule many hobby beeks out of the industry.

So is it at all possible to breed the agressive gene (whatever that may be) out of the hybridised version of the honey bee? What work has been done in trying to deal with this problem and to create a more docile hybrid or is it just a too difficult option with their propensity to swarming and becoming feral?

Mick
 
#13 ·
Modern research, and cross breeding

Recent studies have shown that the current strains of the AHB in Brazil and Mexico have become bred with more docile strains of bee that it is becoming manageable with similar methods to the EHB. I have a brother-in-law who is a native Mexican, and personally raised Honeybees commercially before um ahem migrating to the US. His family still raise commercially and all of the hives are AHB, they are manageable, they do produce honey, and require less medication. He also said that on his last visit they were gentler than the ones they had 20 years ago. He remembers when the AHB arrived in his hometown, he said they all received a rude awakening being stung hundreds of time before they learned that they were no longer dealing with a normal hive. They had no way to afford re queening, so continued to raise what they had albeit with more clothing.

I personally think in the long run everyone will be a little better of in most ways once the AHB has its foothold in the southern US and the local authorities realize resistance is futile. Lots of current pest and diseases will not be a problem as they are now.

I honestly believe this is the lords way of dealing with the world. I'll explain more if someone would like. We may not understand why things are done, but understanding is not key trusting is. Everyone knows it is a hardier stronger strain and proliferates much more quickly. Now, think, the EHB colonies are dropping like flies, but the AHB is not, and it is spreading to areas that CCD is taking out EHB. Anyone think this is simple coincidence that both are happening at the same time?

I do not look forward to the day when my hives become Arficanized, but I do look forward to the day that much less management is key to keeping a hive alive.

My mother-in-law allowed a keeper to place 5 hives on her orange grove. The keeper abandoned them and they became africanized. They stayed that way for a couple of years before the extension office located the source of the swarms that were emanating from them. No one knew the difference until the extension agent notified them they had AHB on the grove. My in law explained they were placed there by so and so and they were not hers. The extension office located and took appropriate action with the keeper and the hives were euthanized. the hive were 100 feet from the road, and about 500 from the first row of trees. While they did notice they would peg the windows of a vehicle when driving by slowly, no one noticed them being AHB until they were told so by the extension agent. I will admit no one attempted to approach them before knowing due to fear of any bee AHB or not.

I personally believe the ones who need adapting is us, and not them. While I do not anticipate the extra measures needed to keep them, I really think all the work and money the state and us governments are putting into fighting them is futile. Stop fighting, and learn to adapt and spend that money researching making them more adaptable and safer for the neighborhood keeper.

-end rant
 
#14 ·
AHB: Are they really that bad?

Bear in mind that in places like Ghana, farmers use tripwired AHB hives to guard and drive off elephants that would raid their crops.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5HwC...hant&hl=en&emb=0&aq=f&feature=player_embedded

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/video/2007/oct/08/elephant.bee

The bees are not "bad" they are just defensive. They got that way for a reason.

In my opinion keeping a strain of bees the sound of which drives off in fright the worlds largest mammal might not be a good call.

Cheers

Matt
 
#15 ·
There are basically three kinds of AHB hives:

1. Hives with a queen of European matriline mated primarily with AHB drones.

2. Hives with a queen of African matriline mated primarily with EHB drones.

3. Hives with a queen of African matriline mated primarily with AHB drones.

Hives of the third type are uber defensive and very difficult to manage. The other two types are typically less defensive but can still be a challenge. Of the three, type one is the "lesser of three evils" in that they will only kick out EHB drones, they are also much easier to re-queen. Based on recent studies done at TAM, in my area of Texas hives with AHB matrilines (ones that would kick out AHB drones) still represent less than 1/3 of the feral hive population. These studies were conducted in wilderness areas where there was very little influence from managed hives. A hot hive does not necessarily mean that it is Africanized, particularly in the case of other hybrid bees like Buckfast as the F2 generation queens of these type bees tend to become very aggressive. In short, the answer to the question as to whether AHB are really that bad is: It depends on the degree of Africanization. Personally, I would not waste much time trying to salvage type 2 or 3 hives because of the drone issue. Type one hives however, are prime candidates for re-queening. The caveat to all of this is that you need DNA analysis to know which is which.
 
#17 ·
Buckfast=hybridized african

Buckfast originally had african blood. Which makes them africanized. Africanized bees have been here at least as long as the italians. Who really knows what kind of bees we keep?? Isn't it all just semantics?? Which begs the question. Do we really have separate races of bees?? And if so, can those races breed true?? That is, is there a mechanism within each race that provides some mating advantage to breed true??
 
#18 ·
This is the future of far southern USA someday. Slowly as beekeepers leave the profession and the AHB take over it becomes harder and harder to keep an European hive intact genetically. People scoff when I say this but why do you think Mexico and central America and places like Brazil are 100% Africanized? Right now some single digit percent of our industry is using AHB and selling them. This percentage will grow in the near future. At some point it will be almost impossible to get packages and queens from southern areas that are totally free of Africanized genetics.

The future of northern beekeeping is here now and its the beeks who are raising their own queens and nucs! Mark my words some day they will be selling their bees south in a reversal of what it has been traditionally. As the genetic depository of European Honeybees will be in the northern 1/3 or half of the USA not in south.
more bs bashing
 
#37 ·
touche



sorry pal but my claims have now been supported here by Tom Laury's ************* post and Joseph Clemens post and elsewhere. Its not like i fell off the turnip truck yesterday.

Ross, I sense you are protecting a TX queen selller? I am not intending ton bash southern queen producers as there are many good beekeepers in the south. I'm just speaking from 50 plus years of experience and knowledge and have no axe to grind.

It does not take a Phd to figure out that if south of the border is 100% nasty girls that eventually the same fate will be seen in southern USA. My claim of the north being the repository for EHB genetics is also supported by University Researchers who feel more beekeepers up here should be raising their own queens. In fact a rssearcher who shall remain nameless in her well known queen rearing, course materials in the introduction, gives a short overview of why raise queens in the north and the short answer provided is to keep the AHB genes out!
 
#19 ·
On another forum, we had a beek from an African nation describe the bees that he works with. He describes a bee that is certainly hotter and more temperamental than we are used to here in the US, but not one that is impossible to manage. He noted that AHB won't put up with the amount of fiddling that we do with EHB, and that there are days that he goes to the hive and leaves again because they will have none of it.

Another beek from Central America isn't having huge problems with the bees in his region. He also doesn't approach his hives, thinking that he's going to get a big 'ole hug from his bees.

These guys adapt, so the rest of us probably could.

I had my beginning beek 'moment' last summer while doing an inspection on a hot July afternoon. 90+ degrees, 70% humidity, sweat running down my face, soaking my beesuit, doing a full inspection on a Lang in a cloud of very angry bees. Quite a few stingers in my suit and gloves.

I imagine that is a somewhat average day in a AHB hive. Inconvenient, and maybe would make me consider not keeping bees anymore, but it might not be too bad once I got used to it.

------

We've got an advantage here, in that we do have a vibrant apiculture that raises queens and can assure a steady flow of EHB genetics into AHB areas. Unless AHB genetics are ultimately dominant, I guess that we'll have some halving of the distance between the two eventually. It may be time for us to consider what Brother Adam was doing and expect queen breeders to follow some of the same rigors. And remember that Brother Adam didn't tolerate a queen who bred testy bees.
 
#21 ·
So, in light of all of this information. Do we, as beekeepers in this era have a responsibility to try to undo what has been done?
Should we be requeening?
Should we be exterminating? (I hate even using that word)
What should our course of action be if we find our swarm or whatever are AHB?
The person that said that his AHB hive gave off 5 swarms a year...is that wise?

I know the AHB's are supposed to be much more hardy then not, but at what cost? The more AHB stories you hear the more people will exterminate instead of relocate...

Im just asking, please dont take offense to anything I have posted above.

Thank you.
 
#24 ·
Managing bees in areas with AHB presence is certainly not as simple as it was before their arrival. My personal approach is to keep a close eye on the temperament of my hives and re-queen with queens of known genetics any that are consistently aggressive when conditions (weather, nectar flow, time of day, etc.) are optimal for them to not be so. I also keep plenty of drone frames in hives headed by a queen of known genetics in an attempt to reduce the influence of AHB drones. At this point, I have not had any of my hives require more drastic action. At least half of my hives are of feral origin and so far none have proved to be unmanageable with this approach. Re-queening with Cordovan queens is another option that allows you to have a more visual indicator of when the hive supersedes and could be at risk.

As for what to do if you find out your hive is Africanized, I would think that your choices are clear, either attempt to re-queen or destroy the hive. I am pretty sure that at this point it is not legal to knowingly keep AHB's in most states.

The AHB problem is an ongoing battle and until such point that those who regulate beekeeping in our state/country acquiesce to them, we must continue to "fight the fight". I think that it is abundantly clear that we will never be able to eradicate them, but it does appear to me that there has been some measure of success at mitigating their influence.
 
#22 ·
**************

Thousands and thousands of more or less Africanized colonies are shipped every year in to California to pollinate. They are mean, especially after building up or in a dearth. I wouldn't care to have them myself. BUT these guys in say southern Texas are able to consistently supply lots of strong colonies early in the year with out the collapsing and losses other areas are experiencing. The farmers like them, they are very active. Plus, lid popping inspections are kept to a minimum. In spite of all this movement of colonies, they are not established here in the central valley.
 
#23 ·
kaisfate,
This is a topic that seems to engender a few divergent responses.

Some want to "kill them all", die, die, die :scratch:

And others want to spread them as far and wide as they possibly can. :eek:

I realize that, contrary to the belief of some, the genetics of this race of bees has been introduced earlier and intentionally to this country, before the invasion from the South. The accounts of those raising queens from this material to distribute freely to beekeepers throughout this country, only a few decades ago, indicate how supremely defensive they can be. I am right in the midst of an area reported to be rampant with AHB, and I believe I have witnessed, several instances where some of the undesirable traits, not so often mentioned, have shown themselves in swarms I've hived and colonies that were "taken-over" by fist sized swarms of, possibly AHB bees. How some of these colonies, though not overly defensive, when opened for inspection, would almost completely run off the combs and out of the hive, clustering in a collar around the outside upper edge of the top super. Try finding the queen when most of the bees from the hive are clustered in this collar and those remaining on the combs are "running", clumping on the edges of the frame and dropping in small clumps onto the ground. :(

- - - - -

I am continuously working to keep the majority of my colonies headed by queens of predominantly EHB ancestry, though all of the queens I produce myself are open mated, thus they have varying degrees of potentially AHB influence. So, if a colony begins to exhibit undesirable traits, I just give them a new queen cell after removing their unwanted queen.
 
#25 ·
Knowing what you have

I think the thing that bothered me about having AHB's was that I was totally green and had purchased the bees I had from a local pro. He assured me the were EHB stock and their actions were normal honeybee activities. I knew nothing of swarm prevention at the time and relied on his guidance. I only found out the truth just before I left the area to come to Georgia. A fellow hobbiest, familiar with AHB, that I finally located took the hives I had and requeened them. He said that his group practiced annual requeening to keep the aggression under control. In my case it was the "mentor" who was more a problem than the bees.

I would not choose to keep AHB but if that was the only choice, one could adjust to the differences and go on.
 
#26 ·
Instead of saying they are agressive over and over again, why dont people atleast try to use selective breeding to get a gentle strain of africanized bees will be much easier to work with.??

Its easy to keep complaining about a problem, instead of trying to find a solution for it.

There are a lot of africanized bees in south america which are much gentle than what is currently in north america. this was achived through selective breeding and good management skills.

Not all africanized bees are extremely aggressive, every strain of bees have gentle bees in them. We just have to select from those to make it easy on us and others.

Check the bees from Brazil and Argentina which were very aggressive once and how they have changed over time to bee a much gentle bee through selective breeding.............
 
#48 ·
Pure fantasy here. The experience in Brazil is that its pointless in trying to
EHB hybridize. Good management skills in Brazil and parts of Argentina with AHBs means beeks adapt to working with the AHB and taking advantage of the increased vigor, and health.
 
#27 ·
African bees demonstrate the biological reality of race

Here's an interesting article on so-called "Africanized" bees.

http://www.earthfiles.com/news-print.php?ID=1541&category=Environment

In this age of political correctness, we are often told that the taxonomic category of race is only a social construct; an illusion. There is also the school of thought that behavior is infinitely malleable, and has nothing to do with genetics. The existence of the African race of bee disproves both of these rather unscientific ideas, and shows the necessity for keeping this taxonomic distinction. Race is a biological reality. You might want to keep that in mind the next time someone tries to tell you that race is "only a social construct", and that to believe otherwise is "racist".

I don't have references handy, but I do recall reading somewhere that very little hybridization with European honeybees has been taking place. What happens instead is a kind of "white flight" of the insect world, with European genetics quickly vanishing in invaded areas, since virgin queens appear to prefer mating with African drones. If so, this could quash hopes of producing a stable hybrid which has the relative gentleness of the European bee along with the vigor of the pure African strain. Also, no one seems to consider that the characteristics of aggression and vigor may be genetically linked in the African bee. But it's conceivable that it might turn out to be the case that you can't have one without the other.
 
#28 ·
So, does anyone know for sure where the AHB is located in the states as in how far they have already traveled into the country.
I am hearing alot of different things.
What about packages that come from say Georgia or some of the other states, is there any possibilty that they are going to be spread through packages at this time?
 
#31 ·
Morphological studies are unreliable IMO mostly because there were never any regional mapping of Morphological characteristics of feral populations done prior to the AHB arrival that would have established a basis for comparison. In Texas and other parts of the country there is also a significant presence of Apis lamarkii in the feral populations. Apis lamarkii (the Egyptian honey bee) are nearly identical morphologically to Apis scutellata. Small cell bees may cause some confusion in a few of the morphological characteristics that are related to the Thorax size and Fore wing length of the bees, however, I don't think raising EHB on small cell comb could change other more distinctive characteristics such as Discoidal shift, Cubital index, 4th tergite Tomentum width and 5th tergite Overhair lengths, etc. As mentioned above, without a basis for the feral population prior to the AHB arrival, it seems rather unscientific to assume what they should be and then estimate the degree of Africanization based on their variation from those assumptions. To me it is no better than assuming that a hot hive is Africanized on that basis alone. I do believe that when combined with temperament and other behaviors, detailed morphological studies on hives can provide enough suspicion to warrant re-queening or other corrective measures. But if you want to remove all doubt, IMO DNA analysis would be required.
 
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