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Articles have appeared from
time to time advocating various races and strains of honeybees
as superior to any other. Yet, at the same time beekeepers complain
about the undesirable qualities found while trying other races
or strains. It is interesting to notice the wide discrepancies
between their various statements comparing one rational to the
other. Why should beekeepers differ so radically? Is it because
the various honeybee races and strains vary in productiveness
about as much as in disposition or is there some underlying causative
effect taking place? I believe the latter, THAT THERE IS AN UNDERLYING
CAUSATIVE EFFECT TAKING PLACE.
Some beekeepers feel that bees
must necessarily be vicious in order to be productive. This old
way of thinking going back to the turn of the century is, however,
a gross mistake showing absolutely no correlation between viciousness
and productiveness. It is not necessary to have vicious honeybees
to make large amounts of honey and pollen. Besides, one certainly
can't work more violent bees than one can work gentler ones.
Besides, as our historical pendulum again is swinging and beekeepers
are under pressure to not keep today's vicious so-called "Killer
Africanized Honeybees in the Americas" beekeepers are again
turning to the black races and strains they abandoned so long
ago. Yet, is this fair to Italian honeybee bee breeders? Could
this be another bum rap going full circle? We have found no evidence
that smaller naturally sized honeybees are more vicious than
their artificially oversized domesticated siblings. In fact,
the opposite was found. We have found smaller naturally sized
honeybees, no matter what the color variation, to be gentler.
Therefore, one should ask and we do: "Is there an underlying
causative effect taking place?"
One of the safest and best
ways to obtain good honeybees is from one's own best honey and
pollen gathers from one's own apiaries or to purchase them from
a good queen breeder. We have several good queen breeders here
in the United States and I am sure most countries overseas have
several good queen breeders too. However, beekeepers sending
away for new stock gamble on most any queen or package that has
traveled a long way to be composed of bees that will produce
well. They also gamble upon the bees safe arrival without transportation
problems that could effect the performance of the bees they have
bought. Further complicating, many beekeepers then have no follow-up
plan keeping records to show that their apiary was much improved
temper-wise, production-wise, etc., with feed-back to the breeder
the bees or queens were purchased from.
There is one thing to remember
when you read claims for different kinds of races and strains
of honeybees: THAT MUCH OF THE DIFFERENCE IS IN THE PURCHASING
BEEKEEPER AND IN HIS MANAGEMENT STYLE, AND NOT IN THE PURCHASED
BEES OR IT COULD ALSO BE AN UNDERLYING CAUSATIVE EFFECT NOT TAKEN
INTO CONSIDERATION. Again I now state: I have found nothing wrong
with the honeybees and queens being produced by our nation's
bee breeders. They are some of the best to be found around our
world. Yet complaints abound today about inferior stock and inferior
queens. Again, could there be an underlying causative effect
not being taken into account in the keeping of todays modern
domesticated honeybees? Probably, but what is it?
Perhaps, investigation of our
past for clues will help with answers. How often has this occurred
to help those in distress learn from past mistakes so as not
to repeat them in a continuous recycling mode? We are now at
the end of our century and the pendulum is swinging. It is time
for beekeepers to relearn their traditions and history, and to
undo and retool that which is wrong for our honeybees survival.
We must follow the long hard way back to biological beekeeping
to overcome our problems. It's not hard, but it must be done.
Chemicals, essential oils, drugs, artificial feed, size, and
to some degree inbreeding, are killing our nations industry and
it must be reversed.
It is important for beekeepers
today to keep in mind that there are basically only three major
races of honeybees in Europe: 1) Carnolian 2) Italian and 3)
Mellifera (the dark bee). Caucasian honeybees are from Eurasia.
These are the main races and strains of honeybees to be found
in our United States. All of these races are excellently adapted
to the original climate and nectar plants of their respected
areas, but unfortunately if exported to another area or climate,
let's say a different continent, these major races very soon
break down by natural selection and are hybridized, if left by
themselves without man's interference, into new strains and then
races, fully adapted to the new climate and nectar plants of
their adopted new geographical areas. All three of the major
races of bees from Europe have played key roles in beekeeping
in the Americas along with the lone caucasian bees from Eurasia
(Asia Minor).
If one reads back over the
years of acquired beekeeping knowledge, one learns through Mackensen
and Roberts in the 1940s, that every major breed of animal and
fowl that modern man knows of today was originally introduced
to the European mainland during the 1,000 year plus reign of
the Roman Empire. Bearing this in mind, one would also assume
that the Romans introduced yellow hot-weather (tropical zone)
honeybees to the European mainland too. If so, then probably
other strains of bees throughout the Mediterranean area were
imported also as early civilizations traded wares back and forth.
Through reading, beekeepers
can learn that Egyptians kept honeybees up and down the Nile
river prior to 2600B.C., and early prehistoric man through his
drawings, left behind in caves in Africa, show that man kept
bees long before this. It is also a known fact that the color
of gold was a worshiped color in ancient times in temples and
at numerous ceremonies. To keep animals the same color was a
blessing to be sought. That man kept bees up and down the upper
and lower Nile river, and followed the planting seasons of many
crops via Nile barges, just as we migrate bees today from crop
to crop, only instead using modern day vehicles is also a well
known fact.
Easy it was for early civilization
to bring the yellower hot-weather (tropical zone) honeybees out
of Africa and scatter them throughout the Mediterranean states,
only to have them very soon break down by natural selection and
be hybridized into strains and then races to create the various
yellow strains of honeybees to be found throughout the Mediterranean
area. Not to say that the honeybees could not have come north
on their own, just like the purported so-called Africanized honeybees
that came north through the Americas in today's age, but it's
probable that man did not slow down their progress any over the
centuries, especially if one looks at how today beekeepers spread
bees around in migratory vehicles. While the various strains
and races of European, North African, and Eurasia (Asia Minor)
honeybees took several centuries for Nature to perfect through
natural selection, this is not true for our American continents.
First there is the issue as
to whether or not honeybees are native to the Americas.This fact
has never been qualitatively proved either pro or con, but popular
belief, the politically correct answer is, that the American
tropics, void of true honeybees, were artificially colonized
by European races. These European races and strains were able
to survive because they had little competition. Today in modern
times it is claimed that a true tropical honeybee has recently
been introduced and adapted, from South Africa, and the earlier
introduced European races had no chance in tropical conditions
of the Americas to survive if exposed to natural selection. But
is this a true assessment of the situation relative to natural
selection in Nature? I think not. It does not parallel history
in Europe and other parts of the world as bees were spread by
man. But note, it is politically correct and modern popular thinking!
I can see it being accurate in a Tropical Zone this assessment,
but not in a Temperate Zone. History dictates otherwise.
This would be true in the tropics
because the purported Africanized honeybees would have truer
hot-weather (tropical zone) characteristics and traits, while
bees kept artificially of European descent would be either races
and strains of cold weather (temperate zone) characteristics
and traits or a hybridization of hot/cold weather traits which
would be at a breeding disadvantage in a pure Tropical Zone.
Africanization of honeybees
is a political issue that must be addressed by beekeepers on
the way back to biological beekeeping because it is a force that
is shifting the pendulum back from a centuries tradition in the
United States of selecting for yellow Italian honeybees away
from the Old Black Bees of Europe. It (Africanization) has now
caused our industry to shift away from breeding yellow strains
to the darker black strains of the true Temperate Zones: i.e.
Carnolian and Caucasian, etc. Because of this pendulum swing,
compounded with a problem of parasitic mites and accompanying
secondary diseases, necessitating the use of chemicals, essential
oils, and antibiotics, and an underlying causative affect not
apparent to the common everyday beekeeper, we have major problems
today in keeping honeybees alive.
Beekeepers must understand
that names on honeybees technically mean nothing to Nature in
the real world. They are notions given by man. Neither color
is of real use in discriminating races and strains of honeybees
because Nature adapts over a given period of time. Having the
same color does not mean that bees are related. The black color
of bees in Madagascar has nothing to do with the black bees in
Norway, and the yellow of Saharians has nothing with that of
Italians. Other characteristics have to be used to discriminate
many of the world's bee races and strains.
While all hot-weather (Tropical
Zone) type bees are various shades of yellow, and all cold-weather
(Temperate Zone) type bees are various shades of brown to black,
and hybridized honeybees exhibit traits of each other where the
cuff Temperate Zones are located (where yellow and black bee
areas overlap), each are different in characteristics and traits
because of the climates and nectar plants of each of their respected
areas, that dictated that this had to be so in order to survive,
by natural selection of the fittest. In keeping this in mind,
beekeepers must remember that latitude equates with altitude
in defining Tropical and Temperate habitat for honeybees.
However, since popular belief
is that our so-called Africanized honeybees are yellow, then
it is an excellent idea to work exclusively with darker (black/brown)
cold-weather bees in ones bee yards here in the United States
in order to make any hybridization instantly evident. Thus to
win against the purported Killer honeybees, a theoretical truer
yellow hot-weather bee of the Tropics, beekeepers must use a
bee of a dramatically different color, which is a truer cold-weather
honeybee of Northern latitudes to win a breeding battle in a
Temperate Zone. This would be because not only would a bee of
a dramatically different color give us instant recognition of
hybridization evidence in our beehives, but would also give beekeepers
concerned, dramatically different enough racial characteristics
and traits to be able to either throw-off the so-called Africanized
honeybees through out-of-season cold weather stress mating; or
a better chance to hybridize the Africanized honeybees hot-weather
traits with the milder cold-weather traits or northern bees,
for a newer more gentler strain similar to the way racial honeybee
strains and races developed in the Mediterranean area thousands
of years ago with the help of the Roman Empire and early Egyptians
thus giving rise to our Modern Italian honeybees so popular for
so long.
Now, since the so-called Africanization
we hear about is almost like a doomsday honeybee going through
our American continents and in the real world this does not actually
happen, then there must be another explanation for what is going
on with the racial spread of these aggressive honeybees. IS THERE
AN UNDERLYING CAUSATIVE EFFECT TAKING PLACE TO ARTIFICIALLY OVERTURN
NATURE'S NATURAL SELECTION OF NEW STRAINS AND RACES WITH ADAPTATION
TO NEW CLIMATES AND NECTAR PLANTS OF THEIR ADOPTED NEW GEOGRAPHICAL
AREAS? We shall have to investigate this aspect in our writings
here, for in the real world in our cuff zones (where tropical
meets temperate), Nature never slams shut the breeding door of
the seasons putting one race or strain of honeybee more dominate
over another or one could not have evolution going forward or
into reverse to correct problems of survival of the fittest.
Instead, in Nature there is a gradual seasonal change-over of
climate, a transition zone of breeding overlap that is always
there taking place year-round allowing for interracial bee breeding
pressure as all elements dictate that follows centuries of Earth,
Fire, Wind, etc., beliefs of many cultures worldwide.
If we believe that there is
an underlying causative effect not being taken into account in
the keeping of todays' modern domesticated honeybees, causing
the pendulum to swing back to black strains and races of honeybees
for popular keeping again, then will this swing alone correct
the problem? We DO NOT BELIEVE SO IF THERE IS AN UNDERLYING CAUSATIVE
EFFECT STORY NOT BEING TOLD THAT DOES NOT FOLLOW REALITY. We
must therefore investigate the past for clues that will give
us answers. After all, how often has this occurred to help those
in distress learn from past mistakes so as not to repeat them
in a continuous warp loop?
It is therefore time for beekeepers to relearn of their traditions
and history and to undo and retool that which is defective and
wrong to overcome our problems. We must follow the long hard
way back to biological beekeeping to overcome our problems without
the over use of artificial inbreeding (nothing in Nature inbreeds
for long without evolution collapse), chemicals, drugs, essential
oils, and artificial feed. Everything must be done naturally
or as close to natural as we can if we are to alleviate and correct
our problems of parasites, secondary diseases and so-called Killer
Africanized Honeybees to put Nature back into synchronization.
We have talked a bit about
movement of animals by the Roman Empire now let's go over a little
bit about some needed bee traditional history that is relevant
and necessary to solving today's problem and could be a major
underlying causative effect bringing all these situations about,
NAMELY COMB SIZE AND ITS RAMIFICATIONS.
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Signed: Dee A. Lusby, Tucson, Arizona, USA, 1-520-748-0542
Email Address: deelusbybeekeeper@mailexcel.com
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