1.
Caution In The Use of Chemicals, Drugs, and Antibiotics
2.
Considerations in Selecting Sugars for Feeding to Honey Bees
3.
Breeding Improved Honey Bees.
I.
Bee Breeding and Animal Breeding
II.
Heredity and Variation
III.
Sex Determination and Bee Breeding
IV.
Inbred and Hybrid Bees
V.
Production of Hybrid Queens
4.
Chalkbrood Research at Madison, Wisconsin
5.
LABORATORY COMPARISON OF HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, GRAPE SYRUP, HONEY, AND SUCROSE SYRUP AS MAINTENANCE FOOD FOR CAGED HONEY BEES
6.
Supplemental Feeding of Honey Bee Colonies
7.
Overwintering of Colonies of Honey Bees With Restricted and Unrestricted Broodrearing in Louisiana
8.
Survey of American Honeys.
1.
2.
Characterization of Individual Floral Types of Honey
3.
Identity of Honey Sugars
4.
Effect of Crop Year on Composition
5.
Effect of Area of Production on Composition
6.
Relation of Granulating Tendency to Composition
7.
Relation of Color to Composition
8.
Effect of Storage on Honey Sugars
9.
Effect of Storage on Diastase Content
10.
Summary
9.
STRESS AND HONEY BEES
10.
Producing Varroa-tolerant Honey Bees from Locally Adapted Stock: A Recipe
11.
Honey Bees: Preference for and Nutritive Value of Pollen from Five Plant Sources
12.
BEEKEEPING IN THE UNITED STATES
Agriculture Handbook Number 335
History of Beekeeping in the United States
Beekeeping Regions in the United States
Seasonal Cycle of Activiyies in Honey Bee Colonies
Bee Behavior
Managing Colonies for High-Honey Yields
Honey Composition and Properties
13.
THE THERMOLOGY OF WINTERING HONEY BEE COLONIES
14.
Natural Suppression of Honey Bee Tracheal Mites In North Dakota: A Five Year Study
15.
Effect of "New" vs. "Old" Wax Brood Combs on Honey Bee Tracheal Mite Populations In North Dakota
16.
Beekeeping Issues
Alternative Varroa Control Experiment
American Bee Journal - September, 2003
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