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How does one "get" mites?

10K views 21 replies 14 participants last post by  stacie 
#1 ·
I am treatment free because I have never seen anything that would require treating. I have tested for mites and always come up with nothing. I assume this is because all the bees I have gotten have either come in package boxes or in queen cages. Also, that I have always used new boxes, frames, and foundation.

So, how does one get mites? Used equipment? Nucs? Drifting? Catching swarms?
 
#5 ·
You get mites by keeping bees (their hosts). If you have mites, you are pretty much guaranteed that they have mites if you live outside of Australia. Suggest you ask someone to show them to you or maybe time to get a vision check.
 
#7 ·
I know what they look like. I have seen them in other hives. I have not seen any in mine. As for the vision check, I find it easier to see the eggs at the bottom of the cells with my glasses off rather than on. Just because you are a human, I am not going to assume that you have pin worms, hook worms, or shistosomes, just because humans are their primary host.
 
#6 ·
I have some mites. I guess they either came with my starting package of bees this spring or jumped on in the field. I saw a mite on a bee at my bee water fountain. They could have got on there from another bee too. That is one of the reasons a lot of people discourage open feeding. I tried it once and quickly learned my lesson. (Pest sharing, bee brawling, and opens door to robbing.)
 
#15 ·
I have had them about 8 months, I got two Italian packages then requeened with a local Russian queen and a local Cougar-WSU (Sue Coby project) queen, both bred to Russian/WSU/Caucasian drones.

I have tested by popping open drone brood, and the alcohol dip.
 
#12 ·
They get around. Having seen NY State go from no mites to mites found everywhere back in the 1980s I find it hard to believe you have a hive w/out at least some. Not saying it's impossible, just not likely. I don't know exactly how varroa mites got to every single nook and cranny of the remotest parts of NY, but they did. Scroon Lake and Mineville for instance.

Mineville is a place where controled open mating used to be done by Cornell years ago, because there just weren't any feral bees in the area. So where did the managed hives, the few that were kept by beekeepers, get mites from? They had to have been brought in by the beekeeper, unless varroa has other hosts which intermingle w/ honeybees.

The short answer is, mites beget mites. No mites? No mites. Ya got mites? They came from mites.
 
#16 ·
OK well since you've requeened with supposedly varroa resistant bees, you might be able to keep them without treating. However a hive with NO mites is a rare thing, if it even exists.

In your previous post, you said "Just because you are a human, I am not going to assume that you have pin worms, hook worms, or shistosomes". Couple of things. If you were somewhere in the third world where people have no medical treatment, you may be better to assume folks could have them. They are rare in the US because they are treated for.

And the other thing people get messed up with is comparing bee / mite relationships, to either people, or other ecosystems. For example a while back I saw mites being compared to a prairie ecosystem and the relationship between prairy dogs, coyotes, etc. It's actually a whole different ball game because a (for example) prairie ecosystem, is something that's been in natural balance for a long time. Varroa is newly introduced to apis melifera and does not have a balance. One day maybe, but not yet.
 
#18 ·
OK well since you've requeened with supposedly varroa resistant bees, you might be able to keep them without treating. However a hive with NO mites is a rare thing, if it even exists.
I am willing to concede that since I have not stuck a mite board under my hives, I do not know if the mites have been picked off and dropped, therefore, I see none on the bees.

In your previous post, you said "Just because you are a human, I am not going to assume that you have pin worms, hook worms, or shistosomes". Couple of things. If you were somewhere in the third world where people have no medical treatment, you may be better to assume folks could have them. They are rare in the US because they are treated for.
Not quite. Hook worms and pin worms are fecal-oral route - you scratch/wipe your butt and then eat. Washing hands after using the restroom and before eating prevents those two. Shistosomes have to go into freshwater snails so swimming/washing clothes in a stream that has untreated sewage put into it is the most common way to get it. Septic systems/sewage treatment prevents that one.

And the other thing people get messed up with is comparing bee / mite relationships, to either people, or other ecosystems. For example a while back I saw mites being compared to a prairie ecosystem and the relationship between prairy dogs, coyotes, etc. It's actually a whole different ball game because a (for example) prairie ecosystem, is something that's been in natural balance for a long time. Varroa is newly introduced to apis melifera and does not have a balance. One day maybe, but not yet.
Kind of like the reason that I did not mention Malaria. The primary host for Malaria is the mosquito, it does not care what happens to the secondary host, kind of like the freshwater snails that the shistosomes use. I look forward to when the bees and the mites get into better balance. I think of them a bit like fleas on a dog.
 
#21 ·
This summer I pollinated our melon fields and another beekeeper pollinated an adjacent field of melons, our pallets of hives were 25 feet apart. Since we get along pretty well he told me that since bees coming back near dusk will sometimes go to the nearest hive and hole up I should seriously consider treating for mites since his hives were infested. Three weeks ago I did an oxalic acid treatment and each treated hive has dropped thousands of mites. Doesn't matter how you get mites, you're going to get them. What are you going to do to control them?
 
#22 ·
I'm starting my third year as a beekeeper, and chemical free. In year 1, I didn't see mites. Started foundationless and I think the life cycle curves just make the first year a pass year in a lot of ways. The mite population can't bloom until the bees establish, blah blah. Year 2 though - yeah, had 'em. Have 'em. Hoping to keep the levels low.

I bought Freeman oil traps. It's technically for small hive beetle (and quite effective) but also gives you a good sense of mite loads, since they fall in and drown too, and you can pull it out and take a look. I dust with powdered sugar which seems to help. We'll see. I'm pretty happy to have gotten the bees into year 3. Hopefully it's a good run I can help keep going.
 
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