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Jon
17-09-2013, 10:19 AM
This is much better bee coverage than the nonsense we are served up from the Guardian and the Independent.


Fifteen years ago, in 1998, a colony of bees was imported illegally into this country. Imports of honeybees were banned at the time because we were trying to keep the Varroa mite out of the country. This was, and is, a parasitic mite which attacks the honeybee in two ways. First by latching onto it and sucking its blood, then by vectoring a number of viruses that further weaken the host. What was notable about that 1998 colony is that it was the one that introduced the mite to Ireland.

Since then, it has spread throughout the country. Within a few years it had completely eradicated wild honeybees. And while treatments were developed to limit the mite’s destructive power in managed colonies, these treatments aren’t always effective. If, as happened last year, hives are already weakened by bad weather in the spring, they are doubly vulnerable to the predations of the mite.


Other issues arise with imported bees. She describes a recent incident with a novice beekeeper who acquired Buckfast bees, which are called after the Catholic abbey in southern England where they were first bred — the same abbey which makes the familiar tonic wine.

“Beginners often have trouble with controlling their bees,” says Nic Giolla Coda.

“The novice’s two nucs (nucleus colonies) swarmed and when the new queens took over, they mated with the native drones in the locality. Their progeny became extremely aggressive. She couldn’t go within six feet of them.

“When you have two subspecies hybridising it can lead to very aggressive behaviour in the bees… The beekeeper just rang us in desperation to see if we would have queens so she could re-queen the hive because they had become so aggressive.”

This, says Nic Giolla Coda, is a common experience. She believes a total ban on imports, or at the very least, the imposition of strict controls is vital to preserve the integrity of native bee populations.

“At a more basic level, there should be legislation at least to protect the native honeybee strongholds because they are a very important genetic resource. There are resorts in certain parts of Europe, in Belgium, Holland and Switzerland where the honeybee is protected. If they have conservation areas there, we should be entitled to have conservation areas here. Otherwise, native bees will disappear. It’s only a matter of time.”

Full article (http://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/features/last-winter-a-third-of-us-honeybees-died-should-we-be-worried-243005.html)

Adam
17-09-2013, 12:18 PM
A well written article and who would import bees after reading it?

But is the Asian Hornet "the worlds largest" as described? And has CCD been confirmed in Ireland or did some bees just die out and the collapse was attributed to CCD?

Jon
17-09-2013, 02:45 PM
No CCD in Ireland! The journalists do find it difficult to get their head around the fact that it is fundamentally a US problem given the blanket saturation in all the documentaries.
The Irish times has produced a couple of well researched articles as well.
I cannot understand why the Guardian and the Independent have elected to stick with tabloid style reporting on bees.

GRIZZLY
17-09-2013, 04:27 PM
Perhaps its because the Guardian doesn't and the independent isn't.?.

Jon
17-09-2013, 06:52 PM
I think the bee coverage in both those papers has been pitiful to be honest.
The Guardian journalist Damian Carrington who writes most of the articles these days frequently confuses honeybees and bumblebees.
The Independent articles often read like regurgitated press releases from anti pesticide campaign groups.
Come to think of it the Scotsman articles have been poor as well.