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Contents
Easy-To-Use Bioassay Spots Varroa
Resistance
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Varroa mites are a major
threat to honey bee health and are becoming resistant to two compounds
(coumaphos and fluvalinate) used to control them. Beekeepers now have
a simple assay to determine whether mites are resistant and thus ensure
use of appropriate control measures.
(K11145-2)
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Varroa mites are devastating honey bee parasites that require chemical
controls. Since being detected in Florida in the mid-1980s, the mites have firmly
entrenched themselves in hives across the country, sorely testing the honey
bee's pollination of 100-plus kinds of flowering crops.
Now, state bee inspectors and commercial apiarists have a fast, new way to
check Varroa mites for resistance to coumaphos, one of the chemicals
used to rid hives of these blood-sucking parasites.
Entomologist Jeffery S. Pettis and colleagues at ARS's
Bee Research Laboratory, in Beltsville, Maryland, devised a do-it-yourself bioassay
that determines, within 6 hours, whether a hive's mite population is fully resistant,
approaching resistance, or still vulnerable to chemical treatment.
Current methods are labor-intensive affairs performed by laboratory technicians
using specialized equipment, says Pettis, whose bioassay approach will appear
in the American Bee Journal.
"Bioassays enable beekeepers to check mite populations before treatment,
saving money on control compoundsif mites are resistant," he says.
Pettis based the bioassay on one that he and ARS entomologists Mark F. Feldlaufer
and Hachiro Shimanuki (now retired) designed in 1998 to detect mites resistant
to fluvalinate, another compound used to control mite infestations. "The
bioassay is intentionally low tech," says Pettis. "I wanted something
that was user friendly and didn't require specimen shipping or specialized equipment."
The bioassay involves collecting two groups of bees with mites and ushering
them into glass canning jars capped with fine-mesh lids. Other materials include
index cards that hold strips treated with either coumaphos or fluvalinate. By
using two samples of bees, the beekeeper can test for resistance to both compounds
simultaneously.
Bees are exposed to the test strips for 6 hours. Then, the jars are inverted
and gently tapped to cause dead mites to fall out onto a light-colored surface,
where they can be counted. The beekeeper counts any surviving mites by washing
them off of the bees in the jar.
Next, the percentage of mites killed by the treatments is calculated. "Mite
kills below 50 percent indicate approaching resistance," Pettis says. "Kills
below 25 percent generally indicate full resistance."
Pettis verified the bioassay's reliability at commercial apiaries in Maine
and Florida and on hives at ARS's Beltsville bee lab.
Mite resistance prompted by continuous use of coumaphos and fluvalinate, Pettis
notes, "is forcing beekeepers to adopt integrated pest-management approaches,
using selective stocks of honey bees resistant to the mite, other chemicals
like formic acid and thymol, and rotationalternating between coumaphos
and fluvalinate."
In some states, Pettis reports, bee inspectors have used the bioassay results
to apply for emergency-use exemptions from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, which requires documented mite resistance before allowing use of alternative
control products.
State inspectors are also using the bioassay to conduct mite surveillance.
Says Pettis: "Inspectors want to have a handle on where mite resistance
is spreading within a state to give beekeepers a heads-up."By Jan
Suszkiw, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Crop Production and Protection, an ARS National
Program (#305) described on the World Wide Web at www.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Jeffery S. Pettis and Mark
F. Feldlaufer are with the USDA-ARS Bee
Research Laboratory, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Bldg. 476, Beltsville, MD 20705-2350;
phone (301) 504-8205, fax (301) 504-8736.
"Easy-To-Use Bioassay Spots Varroa Resistance"
was published in the April
2005 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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