Beekeepers should remember
when projecting breeding cycles that the color of the exoskeleton
is only of significance as a distinguishing character for the
purpose of racial analysis where there is the possibility of
darker (brown/black) 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 coloration 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 (sometimes
by more than 30 days), 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". Beekeepers
also 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. Lastly, 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, as stored honey/pollen combs
each equal stored insulation capacity against extreme heat and
cold, that when combined (layered) side by side, help honeybees
thermoregulate internal brood nest temperatures thus mimicking
warm blooded animals.)
The dominate breeding cycle for the area will be determined by
the majority of mean monthly temperature days favoring either
right (darker black/brown bees and lower temperatures) or left
(yellow/orange and higher temperatures) of 75 degrees F on the
your now made-up "Open Mating Breeding Chart" from
your charted survey on "Queen Rearing Cycles" made-up
from your survey of drone flight patterns based on projected
mean monthly temperatures.
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 (dark black/brown) or hot-weather
(yellow/orange) breeding side of the Open-mating Breeding Chart.
Consequently, for raising dark (Black/brown) 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 (black/brown) 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 to be present, retrogressive breeding
should be a multi-step process. It should start with the separation
of yellow races/strains from dark (black/brown) races/strains.
Next, beekeepers should separate color by caste size, to be lastly
followed by separation of remaining bees by physical characteristics
other than size. (Note - We are talking about honeybees upon
a natural biological system only. Nothing mentioned relates to
oversized artificially mutated bigger is better honeybees.)
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 of natural biological beekeeping without
the use of chemicals, antibiotics, and essential oils and a future
in the now coming 21st century.
To go forward, beekeepers must learn they sometimes have to go
backwards to rectify today's modern bee breeding theories and
field management suppositions, that do not stand the test of
time eternal as being sound in principle and field application.
Beekeeping in the future can only survive and thrive with uniform,
well adapted natural biological honeybees on a beekeeping field
management system paralleling the feral, thus allowing for the
maintenance of a clean sustainable beekeeping agricultural system.
It's not an easy road to follow, but it must be accomplished
if our industry is to survive. One by one we must all take the
long way back to biological beekeeping.
Selecting Breeder Colonies Based on a Whole-bee Theory of Field
Characteristics:
What characteristics should we look for as conscientious beekeepers
to keep our colonies both profitable and manageable in the field
without the use of chemicals, antibiotics, and essential oils,
for the control of acarapis mites (all species) and their accompanying
secondary diseases?
1. COLOR.
Color is of paramount importance in the breeding of honeybees.
What price has industry paid for down-playing the importance
of color in bee breeding to the detriment of our colonies, for
color delineates hot-weather (yellow) bees from cold-weather
(black/brown) bees or put in other words, - Tropical Zone bees
from Temperate Zone bees. This is a major natural biological
division within nature and therefore must be observed in bee
breeding. (Note: Now refer back to Saga #8 picturing in your
mind the world as a basic map of honeybee thermal/cell size zones
based on composites of hot and cold land area masses. Read and
recap here, then proceed on.)
2. LARGENESS OF BROOD PATTERN.
This is important because it denotes out-breeding associated
with open mating in the field. What beekeepers should be looking
for is wall-to-wall solid brood patterns during good flows of
nectar and pollen.
3. BODY SIZE/LACK OF DISEASE.
These two characteristics must always be linked together because
you cannot have one without the other in the natural feral in
nature. When body size is correct for the area the honeybees
are located in, nature is in "Harmony" in a perfect
balanced mix of inter-relationships one element to another. It
is only when the basic elements of life change, that created
stress begins and problems soon follow.
4. BODY UNIFORMATY.
Each race/strain has its own body characteristics that set it
apart to be so recognized. Beekeepers must learn to recognize
this besides looking at the usual characteristics i.e. formation
of legs, wings, thorax, tergits, head, etc.
5. LACK OF CROSSBRACE.
Honeybees in harmony with their natural biological surroundings
have extremely little cross-brace, if any, and then only for
structural support in adhering to places where they build their
feral nests/combs.
6. LACK OF SWARMING.
While all honeybees swarm that are healthy, it is normally within
a natural rhythmic pattern as colonies build throughout the season
for perpetuation of species. This rhythmic pattern is to be accepted,
but swarming outside of the natural rhythmic pattern in off-season
(no honey/no pollen gathering) is not to be tolerated without
undue provocation.
7. HONEY GATHERING CAPABILITIES.
Beekeepers need to remember here that on a natural system of
beekeeping, which normally entails the field management of unlimited
broodnests, the honey gathered from the third super/box down
belongs to the bees themselves, unless the beekeeper in field
management is having to open-up center congestion for continued
brood laying during the course of a main flow of honey. What
beekeepers should be looking for here is individual colonies
capable of drawing-out and filling-up supers up through the 5th
deep super in a uniform manner, relative to other desired characteristics.
(Note: this characteristic is closely linked with size.)
8. POLLEN GATHERING CAPABILITIES.
Beekeepers need to remember here that on a natural system of
beekeeping, which normally entails the field management of unlimited
broodnests, pollen can be placed by the bees alongside honey
anyplace within the hive. Beekeepers should also note that this
characteristic is closely linked with size. Beekeepers with their
honeybees acclimatized to their own geographical local area should
find that their bees will gather enormous amounts of pollen naturally.
To not see gathered pollen is to have bees out-of-tune with natural
surroundings and this should therefore be a trigger to look for
lack of other characteristics.
9. HIVE DEFENSE.
This is not a bad trait to have, just not to extremes. So let's
put hive defense more into a proper perspective. Beekeepers want
natural hives to defend against honeybee robbers from other species;
and including their own. This is important during off-season
when honey is scarce and needed for winter and/or dry summer
carryover. Beekeepers also need natural hives to defend against
small scavengers i.e. mice, lizards, ants, moths, etc. Equally
important is natural defense against larger scavengers i.e. skunks,
coti-mondi, etc. It is important that hives defend when hit or
eaten upon. This is natural. It is unnatural for a hive to defend
when approached without being touched. It is unnatural for a
hive to defend if being opened with smoke (not to say 1 or 2
stings might not ensue due to beekeeper clumsiness) to the extend
the beekeeper is sent running for the bushes.
10. HOURS OF FLIGHT.
Beekeepers should check their lines of bee stock for colonies
that fly earlier in the morning and later at night. With longer
hours of flight activity these colonies will many times be better
foragers bringing in greater stores of pollen and honey.
11. MANAGEABILITY.
Let's equate this with being able to observe, when opened and
frames taken out with use of smoke, natural bee movement upon
combs. This means, no runny bees, no bees boiling over the sides
of the supers either right or left, or bees boiling over both
sides at the same time. It also means no absconding simply because
the hive was opened.
12. ROBBING CAPACITY.
This is technically a good trait to have because poor robbers
are poor honey gathers. It is also ideal to have linked with
other whole-bee field characteristics like good hive defense
and hours of flight where colonies are bred for earlier and later
flight times. An example would be where one bee colony is still
in cluster, while an early breaking cluster colony with earlier
flight times, could send field workers in to strip honey from
around the sides of the cluster within, but still out of reach
of it to alert defense. Beekeepers would be amazed at how many
feral colonies actually do this to artificially oversized domesticated
colonies, thus shortening their stores of pollen and honey in
times of dearth, whether dry summer or winter.
13. EARLY/PRE-FLOW BUILD-UP OF BROOD.
Honeybees that turn their 1st brood cycle earlier anticipating
honey flows and seeking them out are good to have. Mostly this
trait is found with the darker races/strains (black/brown) of
bees. The objective being to have as much brood ready when the
main flow starts, then the queen shuts off and all attention
is giving to the gathering of stores. Many times this trait is
erroneously looked upon, causing good queens to be killed by
beekeepers not knowing that this is a natural characteristic
of such black races like caucasian. Then when ample stores of
pollen and honey are assured for winter carry-over, the queen
restarts laying again. It is a trait of temperate zone honeybees.
It is not a trait of tropical zone honeybees, that perpetually
build brood with no queen shut off until the flow is actually
over, and then these natural bees naturally swarm to another
site and start again. Linked with other whole-bee field characteristics
such as honey and pollen gathering, high quality production stock
can be obtained.
14. CLUSTER AND FANNING ABILITY.
Beekeepers need to look for honeybees that can move the cluster
in winter consuming pollen and honey stores as needed, for those
that can not, do not carry-over through severe winters. The same
is true concerning fanning ability. Beekeepers need to look for
honeybees that can cool the colony during hot summers. This is
a trait that is linked closely with body size and lack of disease,
early/pre-flow build-up of brood, and largeness of brood pattern.
This is because small natural sized bees within a given area
in a cluster cover more brood cells per square inch, thus giving
greater return on each brood turn made. This can be critical
in short flow years. Further, naturally sized honeybees have
denser flight muscle, allowing for better generation of heat
by shivering over artificially enlarged domesticated honeybees,
allowing for better clustering and fanning ability for greater
colony survivability. These traits when linked with body uniformity
help bees to have less parasitic mite problems, because denser
flight muscle from greater use, makes for a tighter thorax with
less air pockets and reduced cavity for tracheal mites to attempt
to live in.
15. PROPOLIZING ABILITY.
This is a trait that should be sought by beekeepers because honeybees
that cannot gather and use propolis can not maintain the sterility
of the broodnest against disease. Further they cannot coat the
inside walls of the comb cavity against intrusion by weather,
scavengers, fungi, molds, bacteria, etc.
Beekeepers will find that when they try to identify colonies
to graft and breed from that contain as many characteristics
above as possible they will perpetuate better honeybees more
naturally adapted to their surroundings.
--
Signed: Dee A. Lusby, Tucson, Arizona, USA, 1-520-748-0542
Email Address: deealusby1@aol.com |