What is biological field
management?
Biological field management of beehives is not new but is seldom
practiced anymore. Basically, it is similar to beekeeping the
way Grandpa used to do it around the turn of the century.
Because today's conventional drugs and chemicals used in the
treatment of bee diseases, pests and parasites are aimed at suppressing
disease symptoms by controlling the problem rather than alleviating
the problem, they do not have a place in a long-term program
of biological field treatment. In the end, chemical controls
only add problems for the beekeeper in the form of increased
resistance to the very chemicals being used, thus only enhancing
the problem.
Colony distress is an important symptom, a signal, which is initiated
by the colonies own defense mechanism. Learning to recognize
these stress signals is therefore important for early initial
natural biological field treatment. To suppress and mask symptoms
of honeybee diseases, pests and parasites with chemicals without
finding their origin is contrary to the philosophy of long term
biological control.
It is of vital importance to realize the various symptoms of
honeybee diseases, pests and parasites and should not be viewed
as totally negative. Rather, they should be viewed as positive
constructive symptoms initiated by the colonies' own healing
mechanism, in its effort to restore balance and heal itself.
When this is clearly understood by beekeepers, then time and
resources will no longer be wasted on methods that mask symptoms
with quick fix remedies and provide only temporary relief, while
leaving in their wake the consequences of product and broodnest
contamination. Hopefully, the beekeeper will then aim at eliminating
and correcting the underlying causative factors of honeybee diseases,
pests and parasites, and begin supporting biologically the colonies
own recuperative powers of self-correction and healing.
Concept of origin and spread of diseases, pests and parasites
It is a known fact that both honeybees and mites have been on
this Earth and have co-existed for many millions of years. Parasites
cannot survive if they kill their host. The question then is
what has gone wrong? Why do colonies die from Acarapis woodi
and Varroa jacobsoni infestations? How do normal healthy beehives
change into parasitic mite infested colonies with accompanying
secondary stress diseases without cause and effect transpiring?
The well-known colony stress symptoms -- unexplainable fatigue,
loss of appetite, physical abnormalities, nervous or runny behaviors,
lack of housecleaning, poor flight activity --, create increasing
degrees of ill health and are considered by many to be consequences
of mites.
Since both honeybees and mites have co-existed for many millions
of years, it must be assumed that something done artificially
to honeybee colonies during their domestication and management
by man has created the problem of parasitic mites, that ultimately
result in the destruction of the colony population by them and
their accompanying secondary diseases. By looking at CAUSE AND
EFFECT we find that beekeepers themselves have wrought cause
and effect in several ways. Combined, they have created the situation
beekeepers now find themselves in.
First the colonies have to be stressed (the cause) causing the
hives to become susceptible to mites and related accompanying
stress diseases (the effect). It has been suggested that Acarapis
woodi may have evolved very recently, perhaps in Britain, and
as recently as 1900 (DEJONG et al., 1982). However, this hypothesis
must be treated with caution (see Saga # 16 American mite history
background). Nevertheless, the very close similarity of the various
species of Acarapis mites (which includes A. woodi, Tracheal
mites, & Varroa jacobsoni) does suggest that they evolved
symmetrically of Apis mellifera from a common ancestor (DELFINADO-BAKER
and BAKER, 1982).
If beekeepers were to study comb size history they would easily
perceive that introduction of larger and larger comb cell sizes,
used in colonies since the turn of the century, have developed
evolutionary changes in honeybees through artificial mutation
of body size, therefore making bees more susceptible to parasitic
mite attacks.
With today's comb cell foundations now on the market near or
exceeding measurements per square decimeter for Apis dorsata,
for most of today's European honeybee races, no small wonder
there is a parasitic mite problem (see table included). The European
honeybees are merely out-of-tune with natural feral races and
strains of bees by way of artificially enlarged body and comb
sizing.
Based on observations and study of comb cell sizes, it should
be hypothesized instead, that honeybees, since the early 1900s,
have been artifically mutated larger by beekeepers using bigger
and bigger comb sizes, thus causing the parallel evolution of
mites as their food source changed.
The causes
1. Artificial oversized brood combs. Since the time
of Baudoux in following Huber's experiment in 1791, but by using
artificial means instead of drone combs, causing creation of
larger worker bees, beekeepers have been artificially mutating
the body size of honeybees larger (GROUT, 1931). This has placed
honeybees with each successive upsizing of comb more out-of-tune
with Nature and natural bee flora. Why, because it is difficult
to create new honey plants and bees which can be reproduced as
such, which have been developed through thousands of years and
adjusted to the existing climatic conditions, soil, and especially
existing bee flora (CHESHIRE, 1888; GEORGANDAS, 1968). This then
creates and adds to the second cause. Known documented measurements
of the dimensions of honeybee brood cells per square decimeter
on natural comb.
| Location |
Beekeeper |
Year |
Size |
|
Attica,
Greece |
Georgandas |
1968 |
733 minimum
854 maximum
815 average |
|
Peloponnesus,
Greece |
Georgandas |
1968 |
846 minimum
892maximum
863 average |
|
Arta,
Greece |
Georgandas |
1968 |
836 average |
|
Crete |
Georgandas |
1968 |
835 average |
|
Macedonia |
Georgandas |
1968 |
821 average |
|
- - - |
Collin |
1865 |
854 |
|
- - - |
Langstroth |
- - - |
838 |
|
Italy |
House of Fratelli
Piana |
- - - |
860 |
|
Italy,
House (unnamed) |
- - - |
- - - |
813, 807, 854 |
|
- - - |
Baudoux |
- - - |
854, 807 |
|
- - - |
Pincot
(for Italian race) |
- - - |
764 |
|
Burgundy |
unk |
- - - |
798 |
|
France (common black
bee) |
- - - |
- - - |
854 |
|
France
(degenerated common bee) |
- - - |
- - - |
924 |
|
Location |
Beekeeper |
Year |
Size |
|
- - - |
Halleux |
1890 |
845 |
|
North Africa |
Rambaldi |
- - - |
940 |
|
- - - |
Fremont |
1893 |
825 |
|
United States |
Grout |
1931 |
857 |
|
- - - |
Schwammerdam |
1937 |
870 |
|
- - - |
Maraldi |
1937 |
789, 954 |
|
- - - |
Reaumur |
1937 |
832 |
|
- - - |
Klugel |
1937 |
832 |
|
- - - |
Castellon |
1937 |
763, 828 |
|
British Isles (200
years ago) |
A.D.Betts |
- - - |
830 |
|
India |
Rahman & Singh |
1946 |
1013.17 A.indica
2380.61 A.florea
796.10 A.dorsata |
|
United States |
A.I.Root |
- - - |
825, 850 |
2. Artificial diet causing
inadequate nutrition.
Poor nutrition is a serious stress factor of any organism. What
happens when key nutrients are present in insufficient quantities
for generation after generation? Larger honeybees require richer
nutritional diets, yet have access to less in Nature by being
out-of-tune through body size to appropriately match natural
bee flora.
Colonies can be in a state of inadequate nutrition through either
their geographic location placement or placement on artificial
enlarged comb foundation creating imbalance with bee flora, and/or
fed diets of pollen substitutes and sugars that are inadequate.
Because of this, one or more of the key nutrients can be insufficiently
represented or entirely lacking in the bee's body adding to immune
system deficiency.
Since we believe that a queen reared this way, can not give to
her offspring what she does not have herself, the result is that
the queen constitutionally transmits a predisposition for disease
and mite attack to her offspring. If honeybees acquire a predisposition
for stress diseases due to inadequate nutrition through either
their geographic location placement or placement on enlarged
brood comb foundation, beekeepers can expect disease and mite
infestations in their colonies.
3. Artificial medical treatment by chemicals rather then
biological treatment through natural management, causing
neurological disorders (CHANEY, 1988), queen supercedures, brood
deaths, resistant mites to chemicals being used for treatment
thus enhancing reproduction of same and contaminating internal
colony food, leaving the honeybee colony unable to function properly
to fight off bee diseases or mites.
--
Signed: Dee A. Lusby, Tucson, Arizona, USA, 1-520-748-0542
Email Address: deealusby1@aol.com |