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Apiacta XXX, 20-29 (1995)
Dee A. LUSBY
E.W. LUSBY
USA
Honeybees can be controlled by working in harmony with their
natural instincts. How honeybees behave, both individually and
as a whole colony working-unit, depends upon the field temperatures
and the weather conditions. Colony thermodynamics, which means
working with Nature's natural temperature rhythms and climate
as relates to honeybees, controls the behaviour of the colonies
relative to brood rearing, swarming, honey gathering, wax production,
queen rearing, etc., all around the year. Beekeepers can create
an environrnent for their colonies to build-up strong populations
for breeding, honey gathering, etc., by working with colony thermodynamics
and learning to remove adverse hive conditions through sound
field management practices.
The queen is the heart of each colony. However, the life of each
colony depends upon temperature. In cold weather, the honeybee
activity slows-up, and finally, completely stops each winter.
If the winter cold is too severe, the colony may die from cold
or starvation. In warm weather, the honeybee activity increases
up to a certain point and then colonies may die from heat. It
does not take a very high temperature to kill an entire colony.
To manage honeybees successfully means, therefore, controlling
their behavior with sound field management on a year-round program.
Honeybees always react in the same way to the same conditions
relative to temperature and ciimate. If beekeepers learn to understand
how these conditions work relative to honeybees, then they can
anticipate and control their behaviors within the framework of
a sound year-round management program.
Queen breeding should rank as the most important activity in
a sound program of honeybee management. Queen breeding is simply
an increase in the number of queens a beekeeper manages, thus
increasing colony numbers. Yet, it is not merely a question of
reproduction. Breeding implies an improvement of the honeybee's
performance capabilities by the augmentation of the best attributes
and the elimination of negative attributes, the final result
being the production of colonies which are uniform in all aspects
and have above average production performances.
The major limiting factor of the start of queen breeding is the
rearing of sufficient drones and nurse bees. Insufficient numbers
of either will doom most operations attempting requeening to
unsatisfactory results (the exception being breeding to raise
the incidence of thelytoky). Beekeepers using colony thermodynamics
relative to the local area breeding cycles within the framework
of year-round field management, geared to Nature's natural temperature
rhythms and climate, can greatly improve overall colony performances
in a period of 3-5 years. Beekeepers need to learn that queen
breeding is progressive and retrogressive in results and can
even hold status quo, as in the case of cloning.
Beekeepers should know both the mainflow-breeding and stress-breeding
times of the year in their local areas. Mainflow-breeding mainly
hybridizes and/or breeds honeybees forward progressively, while
stress-breeding when used at either the beginning or the end
of selected breeding cycles can retrogress bee stocks, like separating
oil from water, so that they may be rehybridized again and again
to re-infuse hybrid-vigor for increased colony production standards.
Basic colony thermodynamics for bee breeding
1. A cold-blooded animal is one that has a body temperature
below 80 degrees F., and that takes on the temperature of the
air, water, or other element in which it lives. One bee or a
few bees do take on the temperature of the air around them and
cannot protect themselves against the loss of heat or cold.
2. A warm-blooded animal is one having a relatively high and
constant body temperature relatively independent of the surrounding
environment. The bee cluster can keep itself warm against a temperature
of 100 degrees F below zero or cool against a temperature of
over 135 degrees F by metabolic activity mimicking warm-bloodedness
by working together as a whole harmonious unit to provide an
optimum and constant body temperature relatively independent
of the harsh surrounding conditions of temperature and humidity.
3. With an internal ambient temperature of approximately 106
degrees F both bees and brood die without some measures of heat
regulation.
4. When the ambient temperature inside the hive drops to 45 degrees
F, bees normally cease work, cluster loosely, and maintain the
cluster temperature at 57 - 58 degrees F.
5. The cluster is mostly nearly dormant at 57 - 58 degrees F
which still allows the bees to be able to break cluster and move
to a new store of honey when all within the cluster has been
consumed.
6. Honeybee clusters generate 12 - 13 degrees F heat by their
normal and natural bodily metabolism or activity incidental to
living.
7. The brood rearing temperature is approximately 93 degrees
F to stimulate both the queen to lay eggs and the worker bees
to feed and care for larvae.
8. Once the brood rearing has begun, bees must generate whatever
heat it takes to maintain the brood nest temperature at approximately
93 degrees F until the brood emerges.
9. If the temperature of the outside air rises to 90 degrees
F or higher, bees normally carry water into the hive, evaporating
it by forced air circulation and thus removing the excess heat
from the hive (Evaporation of water cools the hive because the
specific heat of water is more than 4 times that of air.).
10. Pure hybridization occurs where hot-weather bees (yellow)
and cold-weather bees (black/brown) come together naturally by
either latitude or altitude with a mean monthly temperature of
75 degrees F.
11. As the inside ambient temperature approaches and/or exceeds
both 45 degrees F and 106 degrees F small black bees approach
the breeding condition of thelytoky (Have not been able to accomplish
with either yellow-mix or large dark castes.)
12. Humidity in the brood chamber should be about 60% relative
humidity, while in the supers where the honey is being ripened
it should be 10% relative humidity.
Other basic guidelines for bee breeding
1. Dark (brown/black) cold-weather bees exist naturally below
30 degrees latitude where higher altitudes permit.
2. (Yellow) hot-weather bees exist naturally above 30 degrees
latitude where warm thermal areas permit.
3. Small caste races/strains of hot-weather bees exist at the
Equator and large caste races/strains of cold-weather bees exist
as they approach the poles.
4. As all races/strains of bees advance towards temperature transition-zones
at near 30 degrees latitude, hot-weather bees hybridize more,
while cold-weather bees hybridize less.
5. Nature breeds constantly and constant when all optimum basic
evolutionary needs are met i.e. water, food, shelter, and temperature.
6. Mongrel hybridization is not an evolutionary progression for
it separates when artificial stimuli are removed i.e. inappropriate
artificial bigger comb size, surrogate geographic areas, and
forced climatic breeding.
7. Nature breeds evolutionary change that is progressive, retrogressive,
or cloned, when race/strain survivability is at stake.
8. Each race/strain of honeybees has its own separate breeding
cycle in Nature providing, an evolution separate from all others,
enabling it to exist.
9. Large caste bees on a natural system equate with: 1) fewer
bees per brood comb, 2) slower developmental time, and 3) slower
mating flight speed.
10. Small caste bees on a natural system equate with: 1) more
bees per brood comb, 2) faster developmental time, and 3) faster
mating flight speed.
11. Drones take mating flights only on days when bees are able
to break cluster and fly outside.
In queen rearing, not the outside air temperature itself is the
focal point which beekeepers must consider, but the temperature
of the skin surface of the artificially boxed hive where exposed
to the sun or the chill-factor of cold winds, which may reach
135 degrees F or 100 degrees F below zero, or even more depending
upon latitude and altitude, and time of the year. This heat or
cold passes through the wall/entrance of the hive to its interior,
thus increasing or decreasing it to far above or below the outside
temperature. Beekeepers seriously breeding bees can help colonies
thermoregulate by maintaining tight and painted equipment, and
leaving full frames of honey surrounding the brood nests to act
as insulation against extremes of cold and heat.
By natural metabolic cluster reactions, honeybees thermodynamically
overcome these effects of unfavorable weather conditions within
the hive during cold winters and hot summers. However, to bees,
the temperature of the skin surface of the artificial box is
a trigger mechanism to which they must react, to average the
maximum and minimum temperatures of each day. Day in and day
out, bees must manipulate natural weather conditions to approach
and provide optimum mean temperature conditions for brood rearing
and colony survival.
An ambient temperature lower than about 80 degrees F inside the
colony results in one of two things. Either the brood rearing
within the colony decreases and cuts back or, if seasonal conditions
cause the bees to react favorably (fresh pollen and/or nectar
coming in), the bees will increase their metabolic activity and
produce the necessary heat to offset any short-term decrease
in temperature, adding a minimum of 12 - 13 degrees F of their
own body heat to raise brood, if there is a supply of pollen
and reserve honey stored. As soon as the brood rearing temperature
of 93 degrees F is reached, the queen begins to lay eggs and
the brood is reared and cared for by the colony.
In spring, when most beekeepers think of rearing queens, they
think of progressive breeding techniques, waiting until colonies
produce sufficient drones and nurse bees before beginning their
queen rearing. Many wrongly believe that hybridization is progressive
breeding. It is not! In today's world, hybridization is for the
most part mongrel breeding that produces only a short burst of
hybrid vigor and then quickly falls apart with each succeeding
generation.
For most beekeepers, there should be no breeding from hybrids
since it is beyond most beekeepers to control it. The final result
is nearly always total mongrelization of local area bee stocks
and an uncontrolled mixture of overly aggressive honeybees which
makes beekeeping more and more impossible in today's urbanizing
world. In a long-term stock improvement program, artificial insemination
and various closed-population breeding methods should be avoided,
as they lead to severe inbreeding, resulting in poor brood patterns,
poor product averages, weak winter cluster carry-over, and colony
collapse over a period of 20 - 30 years.
Nature breeds evolutionary changes that are progressive, retrogressive,
or cloned, when race/strain survivability is at stake. To accomplish
either of the three, beekeepers must remember that all breeding
begins with the selection of notable breeding stock of above
average overall colony performance. Beekeepers should look for
and select honeybee breeder colonies based on a whole-bee theory
of field characteristics. To do anything else will, in the long-term,
doom the breeding program to problems and necessitate retrogression
before being able to proceed further.
Retrogression in a bee hive is not a simple process. We have
talked about cell size retrogression and what it involves in
physically sizing honeybees back down to natural feral sizing
for control of all acarapis mites and their accompanying secondary
diseases. This necessary process sets the stage for bee breeding
as survivability and variability are achieved. But, just what
is progressive breeding, retrogressive breeding (not to be confused
with retrogression relative to size), and cloning (thelytoky) as pertains to breeding honeybees?
Progressive breeding
Is the production of uniform progeny within the framework of
a fully naturalized breeding program which will true breed and
the results of which can only be obtained from uniformly bred
colonies. Permanent results can only be achieved by the use of
naturally occurring races/strains of honeybees. Since a bee by
any other name is still a bee, then beekeepers must use individual
or combinations of large or small caste races/strains of hot
or cold-weather bees to accomplish this. Artificial hybrids may
then be created by mimicking natural hybridization, when two
of these races/strains are assimilated. Nature does not produce
complex mongrels. Nature transitions in and out from one race/strain
to another, with a brief transition-zone between, that is a mixture
of each, while always maintaining compatibility to localized
geography and climatic thermodynamics.
Retrogressive breeding
Is the reversal of either natural or artificial hybridized combinations
of large or small caste races/strains of hot or cold-weather
bees, resulting in the production of uniform progeny within the
framework of a fully naturalized breeding program, which will
then result in each separation achieved, breeding true to their
own hot or cold-weather characteristics and large or small caste
delineations.
Results can only be achieved by the use of stress-breeding at
either the beginning or the end of the selected race/strain breeding
cycles where no overlap occurs, one projected breeder-cycle to
the other(s). Artificial races/strains can then be created by
mimicking natural races/strains where complex mongrelization
has taken place, to gain uniformity of characteristics then necessary
for the advancement of desirable traits i.e. gentleness and production.
Cloning (Thelytoky)
Is the holding constant of race/strain genetics from one generation
to the next naturally or by artificially increasing the propensity
of worker bees to lay viable brood, to raise queens as an alternate
survival system to supplement normal queen mating in case the
virgin queen is lost during the mating flight.
Results can only be achieved by using severe stress-breeding,
by using the temperature outside, the beginning or the end of
selected race/strain breeding cycles where no overlap occurs,
one projected breeder cycle to the other(s).
It is a short-duration phenomenon initiated by extreme stress
to allow perpetuation of species, until the first available normal
mating can be accomplished, to allow, the colony to permanently
requeen itself in the normal manner of mating.
Projecting breeding cycles
Beekeepers should remember when projecting breeding cycles that
the colour of the exoskeleton is only of significance as a distinguishing
character for the purpose of racial analysis where there is the
possibility of darker races/strains of honeybees crossing with
yellow
races/strains of honeybees. In these instances, because the yellow
rings of the tergits are so conspicuous, they can be quickly
eliminated one from the other. It is because of this that beekeepers
from time immemorial have given significance to the colouration
of the tergits of the abdomens of honeybees.
Only when more than one race/strain of bees are in a given area
do beekeepers need to project breeding cycles to find the best
times the drones of their bees have the breeding advantage to
maintain racially segregated stock. To project the number of
breeding cycle graphs required, beekeepers should first survey
colonies in their area that are both domestic and feral (Note
- Colonies on oversized artificial brood foundations do not fully
correlate with naturally occurring breeding cycles, necessitating
that differences be taken into account or excluded from survey).
Survey information should include:
1. The number and type of race/strain bees perceived present
in the area.
2. Being specific, the approximate dates the worker bees first
begin to either raise or eliminate drones from their colonies.
3. Being specific, the weeks/months drones are totally absent
from all colonies. (Note - If a few drones are present so note,
and under what circumstances i.e. laying worker, extra strong
hive, etc.)
To plot breeding cycles, beekeepers need to chart month by month,
both the actual "mean monthly temperature" and the
"long-term average mean monthly temperature" (see Fig. 2). Beekeepers then need to additionally
chart month by month the "mean weekly temperature",
noting the approximate dates the worker bees first begin to either
raise or eliminate drones from their colonies (see Fig. 2). Last, beekeepers need to chart
the week(s)/month(s) the drones are totally absent from all colonies.
(Note - "Mean" temperatures are used because Nature
does not breed by utilization of daily temperature extremes.
Honey combs are Nature's regulator for constant breeding transition).
The dominate breeding cycle for the area will be determined by
the majority of mean monthly temperature days favoring either
right or left of 75 degrees F on the "Open-Mating Breeding
Chart" (see Fig.
1). Beekeepers should then look for either open windows-of-opportunity
showing drone breeding advantage, and/or majority-of-temperature
dates, to either the cold-weather or hot-weather breeding side
of the Open-mating Breeding Chart (see Fig. 1). Consequently, for raising dark
bees, the closer the breeder can come to the maximum mean monthly
temperature, for the warmest month never exceeding 75 degrees
F, the better the results will advantage dark drones. Further,
the closer the breeder approaches 57 degrees F, the darker the
results will be. Beekeepers desiring to raise yellow caste bees
should follow the same process, only, the closer the breeder
approaches 93 degrees F the higher the odds will be for that
type of mating.
In areas of complex mongrelization where several races/strains
of bees are determined, retrogressive breeding should be a multi-step
process. It should start with the separation of yellow races/strains
from dark races/strains. Next, beekeepers should separate colour
by caste size, to be lastly followed by separation of remaining
bees by phisical characteristics other than size.
By being able to select how to breed bees, either progressive
or retrogressive, beekeepers can initiate methods to return beekeeping
back to a sound foundation and a future in the 21st century.
To go forward, beekeepers must learn they sometimes have to go
backwards to rectify breeding and field management problems.
Beekeeping in the future can only survive and thrive with uniform,
well adapted, peaceable bees in our urbanizing world.
REFERENCES
SECHRIST, E.L., D.F. McFARLAND (1946) - Scientific Beekeeping,
Earthmaster Publications, Roscoe, California, U.S.A.
RUTTNER, F. (1988) - Breeding Techniques and Selection for Breeding
of the Honeybee, Published by the British Isles Bee Breeders
Association by arrangement with Ehrenwirth verlag, Munich
DEGRANDI-HOFFMAN, G., E.H. ERICKSON Jr., D. LUSBY, E. LUSBY (1991)
- Thelytoky in a strain of U.S. honey bees, Bee Science, Vol
No.3, Pg. 166-171
Authors' address:
Dee A. LUSBY, E.W. LUSBY
Arizona Rangeland Honey
3832 East Golf Links Rd
Tucson, Arizona 85713
U.S.A. |
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