VARROA-JACOBSONI OUD IN COLD CLIMATES - POPULATION-GROWTH, WINTER MORTALITY AND INFLUENCE ON THE SURVIVAL OF HONEY-BEE COLONIES

Citation
S. Korpela et al., VARROA-JACOBSONI OUD IN COLD CLIMATES - POPULATION-GROWTH, WINTER MORTALITY AND INFLUENCE ON THE SURVIVAL OF HONEY-BEE COLONIES, Journal of Apicultural Research, 31(3-4), 1992, pp. 157-164
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
ISSN journal
00218839
Volume
31
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1992
Pages
157 - 164
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8839(1992)31:3-4<157:VOICC->2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
The development of Varroa jacobsoni infestations was monitored in two groups of honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies kept in SE Finland under conditions where no infestation pressure from outside apiaries was po ssible and in a climate with a brood rearing period of less than five months. One group of 36 colonies was infested with 5-8 mites/colony an d another group of 20 colonies with c. 100 mites/colony. Mite populati on levels in the colonies were followed by using debris samples. Yearl y mite population growth factors were calculated based on values of ma ximum numbers of mites in the debris per day during the brood season. The averages varied from 8.2 to 24.6 despite the short brood rearing p eriod and an average calculated 39.8% loss of the mite population in w inter. The results of chemical treatment of five colonies/group, 38 mo nths (group 1) and 26 months (group 2) after the infestation, supporte d the population growth results. Equal numbers of mites were killed by the second treatment in the following autumn, both in previously trea ted colonies and in untreated colonies, a result stressing the need to treat all colonies in an apiary simultaneously. Close correlations we re found between mite downfall levels in autumn and the number of mite s on wintering bees. It is concluded that under the conditions describ ed, untreated colonies can survive for 4-5 years from an initial infes tation by a few mites.