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PRESS MIRROR.
Writing in L'Apiculture Francaise for October, Dubois
de Szczawinski maintains that Baudoux's work has been misunderstood.
It was not the large cell in itself for which he was working,
but the selection of a better bee. The writer collaborated with
Baudoux for years and speaks with authority on his aims and methods.
We have a great respect for the work of the late M. Baudoux,
who was a most careful and painstaking experimentor; but we cannot
agree that the judgment of the apicultural world on his work
is mistaken. It is easy to understand that anyone reared, as
he undoubtedly was in the tradition of Lamarck should
believe that it is possible to improve the bee permanently by
giving her the chance to grow larger in each succeeding
generation. To a Darwinian or a Mendelian, however, this is very
uncertain doctrine; and the bees themselves appear to confirm
this criticism, since they tend to retrogress in the size of
cells they build when let alone. It is possible that, as has
so often happened in the history of science and technical progress,
as well as in other departments of human activity, the end at
which Baudoux was aiming is not the one for which his name will
- most deservedly be remembered by future generations of
beekeepers. Baudoux's intention may have been misunderstood by
those who lay stress on the phaenotypic enlargement of bees by
the use of large-celled foundation-but it is probable that his
real contribution to apiculture has not been misunderstood. |
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