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Adrian M. Wenner and William
W. Bushing
Early in the 17th century,
beekeepers introduced European honey bees to the United States,
forever altering relationships between plants and insects in
this country. Previously, hummingbirds, bumble bees, other native
bees (mostly solitary) and various insects pollinated native
plants. As with a great many other invading species, honey bees
soon became a major factor in the flowering plant ecosystem.
More than 300 years after the initial introduction, a beekeeper
also imported honey bees (and a very serious problem), perhaps
from Brazil, despite a quarantine that had existed for several
decades. That person was not the first to break the quarantine;
all too often the quarantine had been ignored by others hoping
to "improve their strain." Unfortunately, this time
the imported bees harbored a voracious parasitic mite, Varroa
jacobsoni, soon to populate all contiguous states and Alaska.
In September, 1987, colonies in some hives transported from Florida
to Wisconsin experienced colony failure - the first recorded
case of Varroa infestation in this country. A spot check
around the nation that Fall revealed the presence of Varroa
mites already in a dozen states.
Florida seems likely to have been the initial introduction point.
Subsequent queen and package distributions, as well as movement
of colonies by beekeepers (e.g.. for pollination and overwintering),
hastened the spread of Varroa mites throughout the nation.
At the local level, swarm movements, robbing of weakened hives,
incidental drift between colonies, freedom of drone movement
between colonies, and some mite transfer by bees visiting blossoms
all contributed to a rapid, near-universal infestation.
Attempts to check the spread in the United States came too little
and too late. After a flurry of reported finds in this country,
officials in most states apparently rather suddenly ceased keeping
records of new finds - perhaps overwhelmed by the speed of the
inevitable wide-spread disaster. As Sanford wrote: "...beekeepers
did not believe what we in extension or [regulatory agencies]
told them about the mites. Thus, they did no treatments and then
were surprised by losing a great many colonies..."
Not only in the United States but elsewhere, the rapid and nearly
worldwide spread caught nearly everyone by surprise, though it
shouldn't have. As early as 1975, Akratanakul and Burgett published
a warning about the threat posed by Varroa mites.

| Decline
of managed bee colonies during the past half-century. The sudden
plummet after 1985 coincides with first appearance of Varroa
mites. This figure is adapted from one published by Hoff and
Willett (1994). |
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The Rapid U.S. Spread
Some individuals kept rather extensive records during the first
few years of Varroa infestation in the United States,
notably Stephen Bambara (Entomology, North Carolina State University),
I. Barton Smith (Secretary, Apiary Inspectors of America) and
Jim Pheasant (USDA/APHIS). Queries broadcast over e-mail networks
(e.g., BEE-L) yielded yet other information. Finally, Bee
Culture's publication of resource people by state (April,
1995) enabled us to contact officials in undocumented areas,
thereby gaining information to fill in the remaining gaps.
The information gathered permitted us to generate a composite
map that illustrates earliest known
establishment of Varroa mites in each state. A study of
that map allows one to speculate
about probable distribution patterns. In a few cases, reports
did not mesh with one another, but such conflicts did not differ
by more than a year.
Although not shown on the map, Canada
has not escaped Varroa mite infestation, In the late 1980s,
isolated cases appeared along the U.S. border in New Brunswick
and Manitoba. By 1992 in Manitoba and 1993 in New Brunswick,
Varroa seemed to have become established in a few operations
and were later (1993) found
in Alberta among some colonies that had been overwintered in
southern British Columbia. Other Alberta finds in 1994 occurred
in bee yards containing colonies that had overwintered in British
Columbia areas distant from the U.S. border. By 1995, more general
finds were recorded from a few bee operations in Alberta, Manitoba,
Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan. Most beekeepers in Canada, however,
still remain unaffected by those mites.
During the last few decades, the number of maintained honey bee
colonies in the United States plummeted, largely as a consequence
of the combined effect of tracheal and Varroa mite infestations.
Between 1945 and 1990, the number of managed colonies dropped
to about one-half of its former level. However, that circumstance
does not represent the true level of devastation to agriculture.
From all indications, feral bee colonies (see below) have effectively
disappeared in all areas of Varroa mite infestation.
The Feral Bee Reservoir
By their extermination of feral honey bee colonies that had existed
previously, perhaps for many years, the tracheal and Varroa
mite invasions eliminated a primary pollination source for most
urban gardeners and other growers - who suddenly lost virtually
all pollination services taken for granted earlier. However,
cavities in which those "wild" bees formerly resided
can repeatedly become filled with swarms from nearby managed
colonies, feral colonies that will weaken and die with time from
their combined parasite load. Robbin Thorp, a California bee
researcher, refers to this rather rapid reoccupation of cavities
and subsequent death as "annualization" of feral populations.
The rather temporary feral colonies in reoccupied cavities provide
a source of Varroa mites for contamination of nearby managed
colonies because mites travel freely between managed and feral
colonies on drifting and robbing bees. This situation thereby
complicates efforts to manage commercial colonies effectively.
Whereas the beekeeper can depopulate managed hives of mite parasites
to a great extent by judicious use of oil patties and Apistan
strips, nearby newly re-established feral colonies remain untouched
by that treatment. In the case of absconding swarms, the mite
load can be considerable, since colonies often abscond when mites
become too abundant.
A rapid mite buildup in feral colonies soon leads to their early
demise and a vicious cycle. Highly infested and weakened feral
colonies then become robbed out by bees from managed colonies,
requiring more frequent miticide treatment of managed colonies.
Lack of a uniform program for Varroa mite control efforts
exacerbates the problem, in that infestations can also surge
back and forth between apiaries managed by different beekeepers.
Furthermore, misuse of Apistan strips (as apparently occurs)
can be expected to lead to fluvalinate-resistant mites.
Prospects for the Future
With each new introduced problem, beekeeping has become ever
more challenging in the United States and elsewhere. The foulbrood
plagues, followed by indiscriminate pesticide use devastated
the beekeeping industry in mid-century. Each time, beekeeping
managed to rebound and furnish profit and/or pleasure for those
who persisted.
The influx of tracheal and Varroa mites (particularly
the latter), however, poses problems far greater than any faced
before. From all indications, we can breed strains of tracheal
mite-resistant bees and can do so ever better as we gain greater
understanding of the interaction of those parasites with their
bee hosts. Varroa mites, by contrast, feed on the blood
of larvae, pupae and adults and can reproduce astonishingly fast;
faster, that is, than the rate at which bee colonies can replace
their losses.
Can one breed a Varroa resistant bee? The major problem
here stems from the fact that virtually all our bee strains are
actually quite highly interbred. That is, when queens mate in
midair with nearly a score of drones of different genetic makeup,
the resultant colony has a host of different characteristics.
Perhaps some small percentage of the bees in a colony have a
hygienic behavior suitable for ridding the colony of Varroa
mites. Finding and isolating any such useful feature remains
a formidable task under the circumstances.
Neither can we expect much success at finding Varroa-resistant
strains by letting nature take its course in a joint population
of managed and feral colonies. Our best hope along this line
would be to find some relatively
isolated population consisting of many feral colonies and follow
the progress of Varroa infestation through time. If any
of those colonies would survive, they could serve as a source
of breeding material if kept isolated from contamination by importation
of other bees from outside the area.
We are currently examining this possibility (resistance) on Santa
Cruz Island and (hopefully) on Santa Catalina Island, two large
islands that lie off the coast of Southern California. Contamination
of the bee strain on Santa Cruz Island (currently a very homogeneous
strain) by material from the neighboring mainland appears remote.
We do not yet know enough about the Santa Catalina Island honey
bee operation to determine whether that population might have
potential for Varroa resistance.
With the advent of tracheal and Varroa mites, beekeepers
may well have to rethink the degree to which they embrace the
relative freedom they earlier practiced. We as individuals can
no longer focus exclusively on the health of individual colonies,
or even beeyards. We must now deal with contamination of the
entire system of all managed and feral colonies within flight
range (as with the early influx of foulbrood). It may well be
that we will have to impose a region-wide and coordinated application
of Apistan or other treatment to insure that we do not have mite
infestations merely surge about among managed bee operations
and feral colonies.
The alternative? We could merely cease all apiculture inspection
programs and let the strong survive, whether it be the strong
colonies or the most resourceful beekeepers. The danger of this
last approach, of course, is that we can end up with the possibility
of producing contaminated honey and beeswax by those who will
try anything to keep their colonies alive.
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Mite Detection and Colony
Treatment
One can detect Varroa mites
in a colony by a variety of methods, some more effective than
others:
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| 1) |
Insert an Apistan®
strip into brood nest for a couple of hours and then remove
it - with a sticky board (e.g., vegetable oil coated) in
place under brood combs to catch any mites that fall during that
period. |
| 2) |
Inspect advanced
drone pupae by spearing and lifting them out of a comb with a
capping scraper. |
| 3) |
Look for mite
fecal accumulations in recently emptied brood cells. |
| 4) |
Employ the standard
ether roll technique - use a quart glass jar with vegetable oil,
drop in a few hundred bees, spray ether (from auto supply store)
into the jar, rotate the jar, and look for mites stuck on the
jar walls. |
| 5) |
Slip a horizontal
sticky card (overlaid by a coarse screen so bees will not become
mired) into the entrance and keep it underneath the brood combs,
inspecting it each few days. |
| 6) |
Look for mites
on young bees as they walk about on brood combs. |
| 7) |
Inspect advanced-stage
drone brood extracted from cells with perforated cappings. |
| 8) |
Search for deformed
young bees in the hive and outside on the ground. |
| Beekeepers around
the world employ a number of chemical treatments (tobacco smoke,
fluvalinate, formic acid) to control Varroa mites, but
those in the U.S. can legally use only fluvalinate incorporated
into plastic strips (Apistan®). In Canada and Germany, one
can also legally use formic acid, an inexpensive but quite dangerous
substance that is reportedly not always particularly effective
- especially if one does not have sticky boards in place underneath
the brood combs during treatment. |
References
Bach, J. C. For
best mite control results follow Apistan label directions. American
Bee Journal. 135(10): 685-686. 1995a.
Bach, J. C. Don't abuse Apistan. Bee Culture: 123(10):
590, 593. 1995b.
Crane, E. The Archaeology of Beekeeping. Cornell
University Press, Ithaca, NY. 1983
Erickson, E. H. Fecal accumulations deposited by Varroa
can be used as a simple field diagnostic for infestations of
this honey bee parasite. American Bee Journal. 136: 63-64.
1996.
Hoff, F. L. and L. S. Willett. The U.S. Beekeeping
Industry. USDA Agric. Economic Report #680. 1994.
Kraus, B. and R.E. Page. Effect of Varroa jacobsoni
(Mesostigmata, Varroidae) on feral Apis mellifera (Hymenoptera,
Apidae) in California. Environmental Entomology. 24: 1473-1480.
1995.
Matheson, A. World bee health report. Bee World.
74: 176-212. 1993.
Matheson, A. First documented findings of Varroa
jacobsoni outside its presumed natural range. Apiacta.
30: 1-8. 1995.
Mobus, B. and C. de Bruyn. The New Varroa Handbook.
Northern Bee Books. Scout Bottom Farm, Mytholmroyd. GB. 1993.
Morse, R Research review (Too much inbreeding?). Bee
Culture. 124: 15-16. 1996.
Dr. Wenner, Professor Emeritus (Natural History) in the Department
of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology at the University of
California, Santa Barbara, continues his honey bee research on
Santa Cruz Island. Mr. Bushing of the same department is finishing
his doctoral studies on the application of geographic information
systems to marine habitats; he now serves as the Catalina Island
Conservancy's Director of Science, Education, and Ecological
Restoration.
Many individuals provided input
for this article. In particular, we thank Steven Bambara, I.
Barton Smith, Hachiro Shimanuki, Jim Pheasant, Tom Sanford, Robbin
Thorp, and Kenn Tuckey.
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