Okay, so there's a microbial environment in and around the hive. Those who are paying attention already know that it's important and some of the "why".
It seems like the next set of questions is, "How?" How do we put that sort of information to practical use?
In one thread, three years ago...
http://www.beesource.com/forums/showthread.php?214577-Microbial-ecology-of-the-bee-and-hive
Yesterday, at our Natural Beekeeping Symposium, Laurie R. Herboldsheimer gave a great introduction to this topic — "The Importance of the Microbial Environment in the Beehive." The Philadelphia Beekeepers Guild should have the video up sometime soon. (I'll post the link.)
Here are some practical questions:
One recent citation, posted a couple of months ago:
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, and at this stage I assume there's room for those ideas too. It shows people are looking for practical steps. Is BeeSource a good place for that conversation? (I thought of posting this in the Treatment-Free forum, but realized some of the questions relate to treatments and dealing with side- and after-effects, etc.)
It seems like the next set of questions is, "How?" How do we put that sort of information to practical use?
In one thread, three years ago...
http://www.beesource.com/forums/showthread.php?214577-Microbial-ecology-of-the-bee-and-hive
And...
But there's not a lot of practical answers so far, except for the general "treatment-free" approach and maybe the idea of spreading around "good" microbes by sharing comb, and doing splits and nucs from healthy hives.
Yesterday, at our Natural Beekeeping Symposium, Laurie R. Herboldsheimer gave a great introduction to this topic — "The Importance of the Microbial Environment in the Beehive." The Philadelphia Beekeepers Guild should have the video up sometime soon. (I'll post the link.)
Here are some practical questions:
- How does it work to share comb between hives? Within an apiary? from apiary to apiary? What criteria for sharing (or not sharing)?
- What factors affect the biome in the hive? and the microbiome in the bees' guts, etc.? — especially the factors that beekeepers can affect?
- Humidity?
- Acidity?
- Temperature?
- Time of year?
- The plants the bees are in contact with?
- Other insects in the hive (and arachnids, etc.), as microbial hosts etc.
- What else?
- And what factors particular to beekeeping affect the biome, and microbiome?
- Smoke?
- Ventilation?
- Intrusion and manipulation of frames, etc.?
- Treatments, feeding, etc.?
- Some of the ones above, which beekeepers can affect.
- How do specific pesticides, fungicides, and other treatments used outside the hive affect the biome? What can beekeepers do to buffer these effects?
- Viruses - good, bad, and ugly
One recent citation, posted a couple of months ago:
And here's a video, posted recently at the end of the thread quoted above.
I know there's already a lot of scientific research, and a lot to be learned by analogy from other insects and even from studies of humans and human health. But it seems like it's time for a conversation about practical steps that beekeepers can take, using this sort of information. There are some looney ideas in the mix (like feeding the bees yogurt